Mindwise
Menu
  • MW Connects
  • The Mindwise Poster
    • The 2018 Poster
    • THE 2017 POSTER
  • Blog
  • About Us
    • Editorial Board
    • Links
    • Subscribe
    • Disclaimer
  • News
Search

free will

August 6, 2018  by Charlie Albietz

Hanger and the loss of free will

The article explores the well-known but underreported phenomenon of hanger, how external and internal stimuli can influence behaviour and finally the implications of the findings on free will.

Read More ›
in Student Work 0 comments
July 21, 2015November 22, 2017  by Boris Kyuchoukov

Free Will and Subconscious Priming

This blog post discusses the issue of free will from a psychological perspective. More specifically, it examines the implications of subconscious priming with respect to our understanding of free will. Lastly, this post is a rebuttal to some of the arguments presented in Mark Balaguer’s book “Free Will”.

Read More ›
in Op-Ed / Student Work 0 comments

Upcoming Events

  • No Upcoming Events

Recent Posts

  • Justice for me, but not for thee? Identities, due process, and safety
  • Gendered language is one of the determining switch points on the track towards gender equality
  • The experience of involving experience experts in clinical research
  • We’ve got your signal!
  • Psychedelics: Trip or Treatment?

Recent Comments

  • Stephan Schleim on We’ve got your signal!
  • Stephan Schleim on We’ve got your signal!
  • Stephan Schleim on The blessing and the curse of classifying neuroimaging data
  • Wouter Kruijne on The blessing and the curse of classifying neuroimaging data
  • Stephan Schleim on The blessing and the curse of classifying neuroimaging data

Popular Posts

  • Do you remember? Memory problems in adults with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)Do you remember? Memory problems in adults with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) by Anselm Fuermaier Adults with ADHD have long been known to have problems with so-called executive functions, such as planning, organizing and structuring.…
  • Welcome to hotel California! You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave…Welcome to hotel California! You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave… by Barbara Wisse Some supervisors are wonderful, others can turn your working life into hell. Why do some employees put up with this?…
  • The Perfect MemoryThe Perfect Memory by Stephen Scholte The common criticisms from professors about broad, superficially philosophical questions apply perfectly well to the title of this piece. What…
  • The Game of Student Life: Success is for Winners, Burnouts for LosersThe Game of Student Life: Success is for Winners, Burnouts for Losers by Tessa Kiffers In this post, honours student Tessa Kiffers discusses the increasing prevalence of burnout among students and its possible explanations. She…

Tags

ADHD adolescents BCN Book career children clinical psychology cognition Competition covid-19 creativity depression development developmental psychology dynamic systems education emotions Erasmus Ethics exchange Gender Health Honours College Interview language learning memory mood Neuropsychology PhD psychiatry refugees research Research Master Science Social Psychology statistics stress student experience Students teaching Treatment well-being Women writing

Categories

  • BCN
  • Clinical Psychology
  • Column
  • Developmental and Educational Psychology
  • Education
  • Environmental Psychology
  • Experimental Psychology
  • Faculty
  • Healthy aging
  • History and Theory of Psychology
  • Learning
  • Library
  • Neuropsychology
  • News
  • Op-Ed
  • Organizational Psychology
  • PhD students
  • Psychometrics
  • Social Psychology
  • Student Work
  • Traffic Psychology
  Mindwise is the official blog of the Psychology Department at the University of Groningen.
© Copyright Mindwise