Relating free will beliefs and attitudes
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteEditorial
Royal Society
Materia
Free will Beliefs Attitudes Experimental philosophy Open science
Date
2022-02-23Referencia bibliográfica
Wisniewski D... [et al.], 2022. Relating free will beliefs and attitudes. R. Soc. Open Sci. 9: 202018. [https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.202018]
Patrocinador
European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie (MSCA) 665501; FWO FWO.KAN.2019.0023.01 FWO18/PDO/049 12U0322N MSCA 835767; Spanish Government IJC2019-040208-I; Einstein Foundation Berlin (Einstein Strategic Professorship)Résumé
Most people believe in free will, which is foundational for our
sense of agency and responsibility. Past research demonstrated
that such beliefs are dynamic, and can be manipulated
experimentally. Much less is known about free will attitudes
(FWAs; do you value free will?), whether they are equally
dynamic, and about their relation to free will beliefs (FWBs).
If FWAs were strongly positive, people might be reluctant to
revise their beliefs even in the face of strong evidence to do
so. In this registered report, we developed a novel measure
of FWAs and directly related FWBs and attitudes for the first
time. We found FWBs and attitudes to be positively related,
although to a lesser degree than determinism or dualism
beliefs/attitudes. Nevertheless, an experimental manipulation
technique aimed at reducing FWBs (Crick text) showed
remarkably specific effects on FWBs only, and no effects on
FWAs. Overall, these results provide valuable new insights
into laypeople’s views on free will by including a novel
measure of FWAs. They also provide evidence for the
validity of a common experimental technique that has been
rightfully criticized in the literature lately.