A review of Baggini’s book on human freedom

Julian Baggini is an excellent writer on philosophy for nonspecialists. His latest book explores what human freedom is, and whether it is compatible with neural determinism. From the review –

The book’s central argument is that while it may be true that we could not in any given circumstance have acted otherwise, that is an impoverished definition of freedom and by no means the same as saying we have no freedom to choose. Our choices may be rooted in our physiology, our genetic makeup, but out of these arises something that was once called “character”, and it is this that is the final arbiter on choice.

The rest is here.

On the social practice of personal identity

Treating someone as a person therefore means recognizing and responding to someone as he is. And that recognition is narrative; the person is represented as a web of stories. This social and moral practice of personhood is a dynamic process that develops itself over time, as we are not frozen in our identities. We change our own first-person stories over time, as do others, who change the stories of how they see us.

Read the whole review of Hilde Lindemann’s Holding and Letting Go here.