Free will and Determinism Flashcards
What is Free Will?
Free Will is the idea that we play an active role and make conscious choices about how to behave. Individuals are free to choose their behaviour (there are no constraints on choice) and are self-determined.
An individual does not act in response to any external forces (e.g. influence of our parents) or internal pressures (biological factors such as genes and hormones).
A person is responsible for their own actions and it is impossible to predict human behaviour with any precision – behaviour is therefore random, unpredictable and voluntary.
What is Determinism
Our behaviour is governed by internal or external forces over which we have no control.
Behaviour is therefore predictable. The causal laws of determinism form the basis of science.
An example of an external force would be the influence of parents when rewarding certain behaviours.
An example of an internal force would be hormones influencing the way in which someone behaves.
However, there are varying degrees of determinism, including hard and soft determinism.
HARD Determinism (fatalism) is
the view that forces outside of our control (e.g. biology or past experience) always cause behaviour.
Hard Determinism is seen as incompatible with free will (i.e. free will is completely disregarded).
For example, the biological and behaviourist (classical and operant conditioning) approaches.
SOFT Determinism suggests
that behaviour is caused by the environment or biological make-up, but only to a certain extent.
It suggests that some behaviours are more constrained than others and that there is an element of free will in all behaviour (although we may have a limited number of behaviours to choose from).
For example, Social Learning Theory (SLT) and the Cognitive Approach.
In SLT there is an element of determinism (environmental and cultural factors), but also mediating cognitive factors, which means that we do not blindly or passively imitate behaviour observed, exercising some free will.
Biological Determinism includes
any kind of biological influence on the body (and our behaviour).
There are three main biological mechanisms
Genetic
Physiology of the brain
Biochemistry
Examples of behaviours that are thought to have a genetic component:
Addiction – the A1 variant of the DRD2 gene (thought to lead to a dopamine deficiency that the addict tries to compensate for by gambling, smoking etc.)
OCD – the COMT gene (regulates dopamine) and SERT gene (involved in the transportation of serotonin).
A mutated form of the COMT gene is thought to lead to excess levels of dopamine.
A mutated form of the SERT gene is thought to lead to a lack of serotonin.
Gender Dysphoria - Variants of the androgen receptor gene, which influences the action of testosterone, involved in the masculinisation of the brain.
Examples of behaviours that are thought to be determined by brain physiology:
Biopsychology – localisation of function. For example, damage to Broca’s area can lead to difficulties producing speech.
OCD – the ‘worry circuit’. An overactive OFC and damaged caudate nucleus is thought to be responsible for obsessional thoughts.
Gender – Swaab identified the Sexually Dimorphic Nucleus (SDN), located in the hypothalamus, which was found to be twice as big in the male brain compared to the female brain.
The BSTc may also serve as a biological marker for gender identity, as the volume of BSTc is larger in males than in females or male-to-female (MtF) transgender women
Biological Determinism - Physiology of the Brain
There is evidence that certain areas control certain functions and behaviours (as they are affected when damage occurs).
The result is that there may be an effect on our behaviour beyond the individual’s control.
Biological Determinism – Biochemistry
There is also a relationship shown between biochemistry and behaviour.
Biochemistry refers to the role of neurotransmitters and hormones
Examples of behaviours that are thought to be determined by biochemistry
Addiction – linked to a dopamine deficiency that the addict tries to compensate for by gambling, smoking etc.
OCD – linked to low levels of serotonin and high levels of dopamine.
Gender identity - hormonal differences in the womb (driven by our genes and chromosomes at conception) affect brain development and later behaviour.
Testosterone is associated with masculinisation of the brain and is linked to male-type behaviours such as aggressiveness and competitiveness.
Oestrogen is associated with feminising the brain (promoting neural interconnections between the two hemispheres of the brain) and is linked to female-type behaviours, such as sensitivity and cooperation.
However, individuals could make a conscious decision to control a chemical imbalance by opting for drug therapy – SSRI’s have been used to treat addiction and OCD.
Environmental Determinism
This is the idea that our behaviour is determined by environmental influences (e.g. the behaviour of other people – conformity/obedience research) and previous experience.
Environmental determinism is most commonly associated with the Learning Approach.
Behaviourist Approach:
Behaviourism (classical and operant conditioning) advocates a stimulus-response explanation for behaviour.
The key assumption is that an external trigger prompts a behavioural response.
For example, Skinner argued that the likelihood of a behaviour being repeated depends on the consequences e.g. the addition of a positive stimulus (‘reward’) will increase the likelihood of a behaviour being repeated (positive reinforcement).
Social Learning Approach:
The social learning approach is less deterministic than classical and operant conditioning, because it recognises the role of mediational processes (cognitive processes moderate the response i.e. whether the person completes the action or not).
Examples of behaviours that are thought to be determined by the environment:
Attachment – the learning theory of the formation of attachment.
Addiction – the learning theory of smoking (cue reactivity) and gambling (partial and variable reinforcement); behavioural interventions (aversion therapy and covert sensitisation).
Phobias – the behavioural approach to explaining (the two-process model) and treating (systematic desensitisation, flooding) phobias.
Gender – Social learning theory of gender development; the influence of culture and media on gender roles; social explanations for gender dysphoria