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Mathew Iredale

University College London
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    62
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    45

 More details
University College London
Science and Technology Studies
PhD, 1995
Areas of Specialization
Free Will
Areas of Interest
Metaphysics
Philosophy of Mind
Natural Sciences
Cognitive Sciences
Free Will
  • All publications (62)
  • The Problem of Free Will: A Contemporary Introduction
    Routledge. 2014.
    Do we really have freedom to act, or are we slaves to our genes, environment or culture? Regular TPM columnist Mathew Iredale gets to grips with one of the most intractable issues in philosophy: the problem of free will. Iredale explores what it is about the free will problem that makes it so hard to resolve and argues that the only acceptable solution to the free will problem must be one that is consistent with what science tells us about the world. It is here, maintains Iredale, that too many …Read more
    Do we really have freedom to act, or are we slaves to our genes, environment or culture? Regular TPM columnist Mathew Iredale gets to grips with one of the most intractable issues in philosophy: the problem of free will. Iredale explores what it is about the free will problem that makes it so hard to resolve and argues that the only acceptable solution to the free will problem must be one that is consistent with what science tells us about the world. It is here, maintains Iredale, that too many works on free will, introductory or otherwise, fall down, by focusing only on how free will relates to determinism. Iredale shows that there are clear areas of scientific research which are directly and significantly relevant to free will in a way that does not involve determinism. Although these areas of scientific research do not allow us to solve the problem, they do allow us to separate the more plausible ideas concerning free will from the less plausible.
  •  16
    Preface
    with Nicholas Maxwell, Alan Nordstrom, Copthorne Macdonald, Steve Fuller, John Stewart, Joseph Agassi, Margaret A. Boden, Donald Gillies, Jeremy Shearmur, David Hodgson, Karl Rogers, and Leemon McHenry
    In Leemon McHenry (ed.), Science and the Pursuit of Wisdom: Studies in the Philosophy of Nicholas Maxwell, De Gruyter. 2009.
  •  1
    The Problem of Free Will: A Contemporary Introduction
    Routledge. 2014.
    Do we really have freedom to act, or are we slaves to our genes, environment or culture? Regular TPM columnist Mathew Iredale gets to grips with one of the most intractable issues in philosophy: the problem of free will. Iredale explores what it is about the free will problem that makes it so hard to resolve and argues that the only acceptable solution to the free will problem must be one that is consistent with what science tells us about the world. It is here, maintains Iredale, that too many …Read more
    Do we really have freedom to act, or are we slaves to our genes, environment or culture? Regular TPM columnist Mathew Iredale gets to grips with one of the most intractable issues in philosophy: the problem of free will. Iredale explores what it is about the free will problem that makes it so hard to resolve and argues that the only acceptable solution to the free will problem must be one that is consistent with what science tells us about the world. It is here, maintains Iredale, that too many works on free will, introductory or otherwise, fall down, by focusing only on how free will relates to determinism. Iredale shows that there are clear areas of scientific research which are directly and significantly relevant to free will in a way that does not involve determinism. Although these areas of scientific research do not allow us to solve the problem, they do allow us to separate the more plausible ideas concerning free will from the less plausible.
  •  14
    Sci-Phi
    The Philosophers' Magazine 32 27-28. 2005.
  •  11
    Sci-Phi
    The Philosophers' Magazine 32 27-28. 2005.
  •  74
    Sci-Phi Adventures in Science and Philosophy
    The Philosophers' Magazine 8 58-58. 1999.
  •  60
    Sci-Phi
    The Philosophers' Magazine 16 51-51. 2001.
  •  73
    Sci-Phi
    The Philosophers' Magazine 26 19-19. 2004.
    Ethics and Cognitive Science
  •  21
    Maxwell on Free Will, Science and Determinism
    In Leemon McHenry (ed.), Science and the Pursuit of Wisdom: Studies in the Philosophy of Nicholas Maxwell, De Gruyter. pp. 183-198. 2009.
  •  28
    Sci-Phi Adventures in science and Philosophy
    The Philosophers' Magazine 6 29-29. 1999.
  •  18
    Sci-Phi
    The Philosophers' Magazine 28 29-30. 2004.
  •  48
    Sci-Phi
    The Philosophers' Magazine 24 22-22. 2003.
  •  55
    Sci-Phi
    The Philosophers' Magazine 16 51-51. 2001.
  •  24
    Uneasy bedfellows
    The Philosophers' Magazine 60 19-21. 2013.
  •  107
    Why myth-busting doesn’t work
    The Philosophers' Magazine 40 25-26. 2008.
  •  135
    Mathew meets leading physicist Bernard d’Espagnat
    The Philosophers' Magazine 46 40-44. 2009.
  •  66
    Uneasy bedfellows
    Philosophers' Magazine 60 (-1). 2013.
  •  76
    How emotional are moral judgements?
    The Philosophers' Magazine 38 27-28. 2007.
    Ethics
  •  62
    Sci-Phi: Is it time that Schrödinger’s cat was let out of its box?
    The Philosophers' Magazine 25 20-20. 2004.
  •  129
    A paradox solves a paradox, paradoxically
    The Philosophers' Magazine 41 44-46. 2008.
    Paradoxes
  •  87
    Sci-Phi
    The Philosophers' Magazine 20 18-18. 2002.
  •  94
    Must we disagree?
    The Philosophers' Magazine 36 25-26. 2006.
  •  101
    Why are we cleverer than other primates?
    The Philosophers' Magazine 56 (56): 28-30. 2012.
    Ethics and Cognitive Science
  •  75
    Know thine enemy
    The Philosophers' Magazine 25 60-60. 2004.
  •  125
    The natural basis of supernatural thinking
    The Philosophers' Magazine 48 50-52. 2010.
    MiraclesMiracles, Misc
  •  3
    Did Popper falsify Copenhagen?
    The Philosophers' Magazine 32 27-28. 2011.
    Popper: Philosophy of Physics
  •  45
    Sci-Phi: Fraud is an acknowledged problem in the sciences. Should philosophers also be worried?
    The Philosophers' Magazine 22 21-21. 2003.
    Ethics
  •  34
    Sci-Phi
    The Philosophers' Magazine 12 22-22. 2000.
  •  87
    Mapping the free will debate
    The Philosophers' Magazine 6 36-36. 1999.
    Theories of Free Will
  •  5
    Uneasy bedfellows
    The Philosophers' Magazine 60 19-21. 2013.
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