"Not only is this a work of subtle philosophical enquiry and of groundbreaking insight, but it is also an elegantly written book, a work that achieves a rare balance of complexity coupled with clarity. Provocative, enlightening, hope filled, Free Agents deserves to be read and debated." --Linda Hogan, Professor of Ecumenics, School of Religion, Trinity College Dublin "Does free will exist or is it an illusion? This captivating book explores the science behind the existence of free will. Writing elegantly about the complexities of this area of research, Mitchell provides a deeper understanding of the concept of free will and its brain basis, and explores the implications for consciousness, moral responsibility, the law, and AI." --Sarah-Jayne Blakemore, author of Inventing Ourselves: The Secret Life of the Teenage Brain "Brilliant, powerfully argued, and important, Free Agents shakes up the age-old debate about free will by emphasizing what humans share with all organisms--all forms of life, even the simplest, make choices and have agency. Applying that insight and putting humans in an evolutionary context, Kevin Mitchell's innovative account is required reading for anyone interested in this fundamental question. Highly recommended!" --Matthew Cobb, author of Life's Greatest Secret: The Race to Crack the Genetic Code "At long last, a fresh approach to the free will question that is both sensible and scientifically plausible: no fudging, no hand-waving, no philosophical flimflam. Mitchell brilliantly delivers the goods, drawing on a deep understanding of evolutionary biology, neuroscience, and physics.
He has an uncanny knack for rendering a complex story easy to grasp without dumbing things down. A literary gem that is downright fun to read." --Patricia S. Churchland, author of Conscience: The Origins of Moral Intuition "Mitchell argues that the dictates of biology and evolution have resulted in a brain intrinsically capable of self-guided action, and he suggests mechanisms that allow and even impose increasing agency on thought and behavior. Sometimes whimsical, always brimming with knowledge, Free Agents is a lively and challenging defense of free will from a neuroscientist's viewpoint." --Cori Bargmann, Rockefeller University "Kevin Mitchell brings clear thinking and scientific rigor to a vital topic that leaves many people confused, caught between the preposterous alternatives that either humans are robots or that every time we make a decision, a miracle occurs." --Steven Pinker, Johnstone Family Professor of Psychology, Harvard University, and author of How the Mind Works "If you believe that free will is an illusion, you will change your mind after reading this irresistible book. Mitchell tells the epic story of the evolution of life from its origins to the emergence of purposeful behavior as you have never heard it before.
He forcefully counters reductionism and makes a compelling case for agency as the central condition of living beings." --Uta Frith, coauthor of What Makes Us Social?.