Author:Daniel C. Dennett
Daniel C. Dennett's Freedom Evolves tackles the most important question of human existence - is there really such a thing as free will?
How can humans make genuinely independent choices if we are just a cluster of cells and genes in a world determined by scientific laws?
Here, Daniel Dennett provides an impassioned defense of free will. But rather than freedom being an eternal, unchanging condition of our existence, in reality, he reveals, it has evolved: just like life on the planet and the air we breathe. Evolution is the key to resolving this greatest of philosophical questions - and to understanding our place in the world as uniquely free agents.
Dennett shows that far from there being an incompatibility between contemporary science and the traditional vision of freedom and morality, it is only recently that science has advanced to the point where we can see how we came to have our unique kind of freedom.
'A serious book with a brilliant message'
Matt Ridley, author of The Red Queen
'Powerful and ingenious ... The definitive argument that the human mind is a product of evolution'
John Gray, Independent
'A book of sparkling brio and seemingly effortless panache ... Dennett at his best is as good as it gets'
Spectator
Daniel C. Dennett is one of the most original and provocative thinkers in the world. A brilliant polemicist and philosopher, he is famous for challenging unexamined orthodoxies, and an outspoken supporter of the Brights movement. His books include Brainstorms, Brainchildren, Elbow Room, Breaking the Spell, Darwin's Dangerous Idea and Freedom Evolves.
At last! An up to date examination of what makes birders tick. And about time too! Wonderfully written
—— Bill OddieA natural history version of Fever Pitch... Reading it may even make you want to try out this strangely addictive past time for yourself
—— GuardianIntensely readable, very funny and highly enlightening
—— New ScientistWith a mixture of well-chosen anecdotes and self-deprecating humour, Cocker succeeds in making event he most hardened cynic appreciate his passion. Birders is a stylish work in a long tradition of fine writing on the subject
—— GuardianThe best account yet of the "tribe" and its wonderful, unworldly passions
—— The TimesAn excellent account of neuroscience today
—— Financial TimesAn elegantly written and cogent guide to contemporary ideas about how and why the brain works
—— IndependentRose has a subtle mind, a prose style of great clarity and a civilised and compassionate approach to what neuroscience tells us about human nature
—— Sunday Times