What Does It Mean To Have Free Will? Brain Injury and Neuroscience cover art

What Does It Mean To Have Free Will? Brain Injury and Neuroscience

What Does It Mean To Have Free Will? Brain Injury and Neuroscience

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What if your choices aren’t really yours?

In this episode, we break down one of the most unsettling questions in neuroscience and philosophy: Do humans actually have free will? From the famous experiments of Benjamin Libet to modern brain scans that predict decisions before you’re aware of them, the science points in a direction most people aren’t ready for.

But this isn’t just theory.

We explore how brain injuries, trauma, and unseen biological factors can completely reshape behavior—using real cases like Phineas Gage and the University of Texas tower shooting. If behavior is driven by the brain… then what does that mean for guilt, blame, justice, and personal responsibility?

You’ll also hear a deeply personal perspective on living with a traumatic brain injury—and how it changes the way you see your own decisions.

This episode dives into:

  • The Libet experiment and why your brain decides before “you” do
  • Why people confidently explain choices they never actually made (confabulation)
  • The argument from Robert Sapolsky: free will might not exist at all
  • The counterargument from Daniel Dennett: why free will still matters
  • How trauma, environment, and biology shape behavior without you realizing it
  • What this means for criminal justice, punishment, and accountability
  • And the one idea from Viktor Frankl that might still give us a form of freedom

If everything you do is shaped by forces you didn’t choose…
what do you do with that truth?

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