Lieke Asma

Munich School of Philosophy
  •  46
    This paper challenges the dualism between individualist and structuralist accounts of discrimination by offering a Hegelian analysis of bias as habit. It argues that a division between individual and structural factors obscures the deeply interdependent nature of individual agency and structural context. Drawing on Hegel’s philosophy – especially his conceptions of habit (Gewohnheit), ethical life (Sittlichkeit), and practical freedom – we develop a framework in which biases understood as habits…Read more
  • This chapter examines suicidality and suicidal ambivalence through the lens of situated cognition. It examines how contextual factors can actively influence and shape the decision-making process and behavior of a person in the context of suicide, by focusing on the impact of means restriction and the role of other people in prevention of suicide in public spaces. The chapter argues that rethinking suicidality from the perspective of situated cognition offers valuable insights for our understandi…Read more
  • One of the central aims of suicide research is trying to understand why people decide to end their lives and to identify the persons particularly at risk of doing so. Since suicide is by definition intentional, it is important to investigate the reasons persons have for suicide. But what is exactly involved in understanding a person’s reasons? Is it similar to uncovering causal influences, or is acting for reasons of a substantially different nature? This chapter has two aims. First, the nature …Read more
  •  14
    G.E.M. Anscombe en de gammawetenschappen
    Algemeen Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Wijsbegeerte 117 (4): 341-345. 2025.
    Amsterdam University Press is a leading publisher of academic books, journals and textbooks in the Humanities and Social Sciences. Our aim is to make current research available to scholars, students, innovators, and the general public. AUP stands for scholarly excellence, global presence, and engagement with the international academic community.
  •  70
    Does Empathy Reduce Implicit Bias? A Critical Review
    with Lena Schützle
    Topoi 44 (4): 947-958. 2025.
    A substantial amount of research demonstrates that we sometimes discriminate against members of certain social groups, even in the absence of an intention to do so. One possible remedy to this kind of discrimination may be empathy. Perhaps, if we better understand what other people feel and think, and cultivate empathic feelings like sympathy and compassion, we will be less implicitly biased against them. In this paper, we critically reflect on the studies that have investigated this relationshi…Read more
  •  55
    Explaining Unconscious Discrimination: Misattribution and Rationalization
    Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 1-20. forthcoming.
    Implicit bias involves unintentionally disadvantaging persons in virtue of their membership of a certain social group. It is not completely clear, however, why agents sometimes are conscious of unintentionally discriminating, while in other scenarios they are not. Typically, this is explained in terms of characteristics of the individual agent, for example whether they are motivated or have the cognitive resources to reflect on their initial evaluation. In the paper, I argue that we need to cons…Read more
  •  45
    Stereotyperen, perspectieven en de ‘cultuuroorlogen’
    Algemeen Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Wijsbegeerte 116 (2): 193-197. 2024.
    Amsterdam University Press is a leading publisher of academic books, journals and textbooks in the Humanities and Social Sciences. Our aim is to make current research available to scholars, students, innovators, and the general public. AUP stands for scholarly excellence, global presence, and engagement with the international academic community.
  •  36
    Waarom je denkt objectief en rechtvaardig te zijn, maar dat toch niet bent. We kunnen mensen onrechtvaardig behandelen zonder het te willen, en zelfs zonder het op te merken. Onbewust en ongewild maken we onderscheid tussen personen op basis van hun gender, etniciteit, leeftijd, lichaamsgewicht of seksuele oriëntatie. Hoe kan het dat ons zelfbeeld zo afwijkt van ons gedrag? Het antwoord lijkt helder: in het onbewuste liggen vooroordelen opgeslagen, die ongemerkt onze gedachten, gevoelens en besl…Read more
  •  146
    Implicit bias as unintentional discrimination
    Synthese 202 (5): 1-21. 2023.
    In this paper, I argue that instead of primarily paying attention to the nature of implicit attitudes that are taken to cause implicit discrimination, we should investigate how discrimination can be implicit in itself. I propose to characterize implicit discrimination as unintentional discrimination: the person responds to facts unintentionally and often unconsciously which are, given their end, irrelevant and imply unfair treatment. The result is a unified account of implicit bias that allows f…Read more
  • This special section is the outcome of a conference organized in Würzburg, as part of the interdisciplinary research project Motivational and Volitional Processes of Human Integration: Philosophical and Psychological Approaches to Human Flourishing (2018–2021). The goal of the project was to connect (philosophical) perspectives on flourishing to empirical research that suggests that implicit motives play an important role in who we are and what we do and decide. One main aim was to find a middle…Read more
  •  181
    From causation to conscious control
    Philosophical Explorations 26 (3): 1-17. 2023.
    Surprisingly little attention has been paid to the nature of conscious control. As a result, experiments suggesting that we lack conscious control over our actions cannot be properly evaluated. Joshua Shepherd (2015; 2021) aims to fill this gap. His proposal is grounded in the standard causalist account of action, according to which, simply put, bodily movements are controlled by the agent if and only if they are caused, in the right way, by the relevant psychological states. In this paper, I ar…Read more
  •  269
    The relationship between free will and consciousness
    Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 23 (4): 823-839. 2024.
    Reflection on the relationship between free will and consciousness has mainly revolved around Libet-style experiments, for example by criticizing the claim that conscious intentions never cause what we do. Less attention has been paid to whether this response captures the sense in which consciousness is relevant for free will, however. In this paper I argue that scholars seem to accept two assumptions they should reject: (1) that the relationship between free will and consciousness is best chara…Read more
  •  94
    Mijn intenties en ik. Filosofie van de vrije wil
    Boom uitgevers Amsterdam. 2021.
    Vrije wil is een raadselachtig fenomeen. Wij mensen hebben de indruk dat we zelf keuzes maken, maar de wetenschap vertelt een heel ander verhaal: onze handelingen zijn slechts het resultaat van onze persoonlijke eigenschappen, onbewuste associaties en hersenprocessen. Ons bewuste zelf is niets meer dan een passieve toeschouwer. Het is dan ook niet verrassend dat wetenschappelijk onderzoek vaak uitmondt in determinisme of ‘willusionisme’. Maar wat is vrije wil eigenlijk? En wat betekent het om ze…Read more
  •  104
    On the nature of implicit motives
    Theory and Psychology 33 (4). 2023.
    David McClelland’s research on the different kinds of (implicit) motives and how to measure them has a substantial influence on contemporary psychology of motivation. He did not, however, reflect on the nature of implicit motives in much detail. In this paper I fill this gap. I argue that implicit motives should not be understood as mental states the agent has no introspective access to. Instead, I propose that the implicit motives that McClelland and others in the field distinguish – the power,…Read more
  •  181
    Habitual virtuous action and acting for reasons
    Philosophical Psychology 35 (7): 1036-1056. 2022.
    How can agents act virtuously out of habit? Virtuous actions are done for the right reasons, and acting for (right) reasons seems to involve deliberation. Yet, deliberation is absent if an agent’s action is habitual. That implies that the relationship between reasons and actions should be characterized in such a way that deliberation is unnecessary. In this paper, I examine three possible solutions: radical externalism, unconscious psychologism, and unconscious factualism. I argue that these pro…Read more
  • Primary teachers' attitudes towards science and technology: Results of a focus group study
    with Juliette Walma van der Molen and Sandra van Aalderen-Smeets
    In Lieke Asma, Juliette Walma van der Molen & Sandra van Aalderen-Smeets (eds.), Professional Development for Primary Teachers in Science and Technology The Dutch VTB-Pro Project in an International Perspective, . pp. 89-105. 2011.
  • Primary teachers' attitudes towards science: A new theoretical framework
    with Sandra van Aalderen - Smeets and Juliette Walma van der Molen
    Science Education 1 (96). 2012.
  •  134
    The Guidance Theory of Action: A Critical Review
    Topoi 40 (3): 687-694. 2021.
    Theories based on Frankfurt’s (Am Philos Q 15(2):157–162, 1978) view of action have recently been developed to account for passive, automatic, and habitual actions. What these theories share is that they aim to distinguish between actions and mere bodily movements without appealing to psychological states as causes. Instead, agents have guidance control over their actions. In this paper I argue that the versions of the theory that have been proposed are problematic. I propose to pay attention to…Read more
  •  93
    Neurowetenschappen en de Illusie van Vrije Wil
    Algemeen Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Wijsbegeerte 111 (3): 339-358. 2019.
    Neuroscience and the Illusion of Free WillCurrently, few neuroscientists and philosophers still defend the claim that neuroscience has shown the brain ‘decides’ what we do and that free will is an illusion. This does not imply, however, that this kind of neuroscientific researchcould notsay anything about the existence of free will. Neuroscience can offer insights in the unconscious causes and underlying processes of our actions and, because of this, could perhaps show whether we act out of free…Read more
  •  51
    There Is No Free Won't: The Role Definitions Play
    Journal of Consciousness Studies 24 (5-6): 8-23. 2017.
    In this paper, I analyse how neuroscientists come to the conclusion that the brain 'decides' what we will do. I do so by focusing on a recent study on free won't, from which it is concluded that the decision to veto is not free. First, I argue that assumptions about voluntariness and freedom that underlie this and other Libet-style experiments are more stringent than assumed by other critics. Second, I claim that these assumptions lead to an experimental setting in which the conclusion that the …Read more