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In 1964-1965, Hans Helmut Kornhuber and Luder Deecke achieved a
scientific breakthrough with the discovery of the
Bereitschaftspotential (BP), or readiness potential. In The Will
and its Brain, Kornhuber and Deecke present evidence that proves we
can record activity from the human brain occurring prior to our
volitional movements or actions. Such preparatory activity is
generated by specific brain regions, particularly by the
supplementary motor area (SMA) of the frontal lobe, which lies on
the inner surface of the brain between the hemispheres. The primary
(precentral) motor cortex (MI) later becomes activated in preparing
for action. Consequently, the authors discriminate between two
components of the preparatory activity of the
Bereitschaftspotential: an early SMA-generated BP1 and a late
MI-derived BP2. Between BP1 and BP2, the intentional activity runs
over the so-called motor loop via the basal ganglia. Kornhuber and
Deecke discuss these and other brain processing systems while
focusing on the concept of free will. They claim that we, indeed,
have free will. It may not be absolutely free, but free in terms of
degrees. We can take efforts to increase our degrees of freedom
through self-improvement, but we can also lose degrees of freedom
through self-mismanagement.
In 1964 1965, Hans Helmut Kornhuber and Luder Deecke achieved a
scientific breakthrough with the discovery of the
Bereitschaftspotential (BP), or readiness potential. In The Will
and its Brain, Kornhuber and Deecke present evidence that proves we
can record activity from the human brain occurring prior to our
volitional movements or actions. Such preparatory activity is
generated by specific brain regions, particularly by the
supplementary motor area (SMA) of the frontal lobe, which lies on
the inner surface of the brain between the hemispheres. The primary
(precentral) motor cortex (MI) later becomes activated in preparing
for action. Consequently, the authors discriminate between two
components of the preparatory activity of the
Bereitschaftspotential: an early SMA-generated BP1 and a late
MI-derived BP2. Between BP1 and BP2, the intentional activity runs
over the so-called motor loop via the basal ganglia. Kornhuber and
Deecke discuss these and other brain processing systems while
focusing on the concept of free will. They claim that we, indeed,
have free will. It may not be absolutely free, but free in terms of
degrees. We can take efforts to increase our degrees of freedom
through self-improvement, but we can also lose degrees of freedom
through self-mismanagement.
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