Midwest Studies in Philosophy

Volume 29, 2005

Free Will and Moral Responsibility

Walter Glannon
Pages 68-82

Neurobiology, Neuroimaging, and Free Will

Cited by

  • Nicole A Vincent. Neuroethics. Responsibility, Dysfunction and Capacity 2008. [CrossRef]
  • Sruthi Rothenfluch. Review of Philosophy and Psychology. A Modified Self-Knowledge Model of Thought Insertion 2020. [CrossRef]
  • Nicole A Vincent. Philosophical Explorations. Blame, desert and compatibilist capacity: a diachronic account of moderateness in regards to reasons-responsiveness 2013. [CrossRef]
  • Simo Vehmas. Childhood and Disability in the Nordic Countries 2015: 51. [CrossRef]
  • Tom Buller. The American Journal of Bioethics. Morality in a Blur 2008. [CrossRef]
  • Nicole A Vincent. Philosophical Explorations. Legal responsibility adjudication and the normative authority of the mind sciences 2011. [CrossRef]
  • Karsten Weber. SSRN Electronic Journal. Constraints to the Application of ICT Implants: The Concept of Self-Ownership 2009. [CrossRef]
  • Rebecca Roache. AJOB Neuroscience. Can Brain Scans Prove Criminals Unaccountable? 2014. [CrossRef]
  • Roy F. Baumeister, Andrew E. Monroe. 2014: 1. [CrossRef]
  • Chris Kaposy. Neuroethics. Will Neuroscientific Discoveries about Free Will and Selfhood Change our Ethical Practices? 2009. [CrossRef]
  • Nicole A Vincent. Neuroethics. Neuroimaging and Responsibility Assessments 2011. [CrossRef]
  • Laura Klaming, Bert-Jaap Koops. International Neurolaw 2012: 227. [CrossRef]
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