---
product_id: 48678871
title: "Free Will"
price: "₹ 2195"
currency: INR
in_stock: false
reviews_count: 8
url: https://www.desertcart.in/products/48678871-free-will
store_origin: IN
region: India
---

# Ranked #286 in Philosophy Compact 96 pages 1st Edition, 127g lightweight Free Will

**Price:** ₹ 2195
**Availability:** ❌ Out of Stock

## Summary

> 🧠 Unlock the illusion: challenge your choices before they choose you

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- **What is this?** Free Will
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## Key Features

- • **Concise & Impactful:** A sharp 96-page read that fits your busy schedule
- • **Philosophy Bestseller:** Join thousands exploring the cutting edge of free will debate
- • **Scientifically Grounded:** Neuroscience-backed insights that challenge your assumptions
- • **Accessible & Provocative:** Clear, engaging prose that sparks deep conversations
- • **Affordable Intellectual Fuel:** Premium ideas at just £2.99 Kindle price—no excuses

## Overview

Free Will by Sam Harris is a succinct, neuroscience-informed exploration of the illusion of free will, ranked among the top philosophy books. At just 96 pages, this 1st edition bestseller combines accessible writing with cutting-edge research to provoke fresh thinking on consciousness, choice, and determinism.

## Description

Free Will : Harris, Sam: desertcart.co.uk: Books

Review: an accessible chew on the gristle of this fundamental and intriguing problem - This is a short book in which Harris pretty convincingly argues the case against the idea that we can do other than we do and also briefly considers the motivational, moral and political implications of accepting such a view. Central to Harris's argument is his view that not only is free will incompatible with objective descriptions of behaviour but also with our subjective experience: thus "the illusion of free will is in itself an illusion". In our subjective experience thoughts arise and take hold (or not) in ways that are subjectively if not theoretically mysterious (i.e. theoretically they arise from our brain states that are in themselves formed of chains of biologically coded influence). He writes vividly of his own 'choices' to show the determinism that is apparent if one carefully reflects on ordinary experience; "the choice you make will come out of the darkness of prior causes that you, the conscious witness of your experience, did not bring into being". He acknowledges, however, that our efforts matter and that we can alter the framework of our influences to make certain kinds of 'choices' more likely. He rejects that this entails free will but insofar as it acknowledges that we are causally relevant agents in the direction of our lives it seems to me that he comes close. If you find this review a bit heavy going, that is because I have needed to be succinct - the book itself is a much easier read. I recommend this book strongly to anyone who wants an accessible chew on the gristle of this fundamental and intriguing problem. Of course, whether or not you choose to follow this up is all a matter of determinism...
Review: I couldn't help but like this book. - I've read all six of Sam Harris's books in the last few months, and picking a favourite would be like asking a mother to pick her favourite child, but if I had to rank them from "best" to just "excellent", Free Will would come near the top. Drawing on his expertise as both a neuroscientist and an experienced meditator, Harris explores the age-old philosophical question, "do we have free will? Are we truly the conscious authors of our actions, or are we just fixed-track automatons living under the delusion that we have control?" The question itself is nothing new, and numerous answers have been offered over the years, ranging ranging from the interesting and insightful to the confusing, meaningless, and masturbatory. Can Harris bring anything new to the table? To me: yes. Granted, I have no formal training in philosophy and am not familiar with the huge body of work that already exists on this subject, but Free Will isn't intended to be an all-encompassing philosophical treatise to be kept on dusty university library shelves and only ever pondered by PhDs. It's a succinct and incisive opinion piece that's open to all comers, and I found Harris's arguments to be eye-opening and authoritative - delivered with his trademark ability to steamroll any intellectual opponent in his path. Without meaning to spoil the ending, Harris's own answer to the question "do we have free will?" is a resounding "no". His arguments have been formulated in both the philosophy department and the research lab - and I found them convincing from all angles. We don't choose our thoughts - our thoughts simple arise in the brain uninvited, and anyone who's ever tried just 5 minutes of meditation can tell you first-hand how difficult it is to get even a hint of control over the contents of our own heads. Recent advances in brain imaging have also shown that we're able to predict with high accuracy the decisions a person is going to make *long before the person in question feels like they've actually made the decision.* If other people can predict our actions before we even know them ourselves, what space does this leave for free will as the genesis of those actions? I'm not sure there's any, and reading this book has made me acutely aware of just how little of the behaviour I consider to be "me" is the result of conscious choice - if that choice could ever be said to be "conscious" at all. My main criticism of this book is that it's very short - more of a pamphlet than a book - but at £2.99 for the Kindle version, it's not a major complaint. Also, if you've read "Waking Up" by the same author, there's a fair amount of overlap between the two books (including a few passages that seem be copied and pasted directly from one book to the other), so you may get the occasional sense of deja vu as you read Free Will, but its "exclusive" sections are more than enough to justify the low cost and the short amount of time it will take you to read it. Read this book. It's not like you have a choice.

## Features

- New Store Stock

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN  | 1451683405 |
| Best Sellers Rank | 27,294 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 286 in Philosophy (Books) 385 in Scientific Psychology & Psychiatry 828 in Popular Science |
| Customer reviews | 4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars (5,021) |
| Dimensions  | 14.29 x 0.76 x 20.32 cm |
| Edition  | 1st |
| ISBN-10  | 9781451683400 |
| ISBN-13  | 978-1451683400 |
| Item weight  | 127 g |
| Language  | English |
| Print length  | 96 pages |
| Publication date  | 6 Mar. 2012 |
| Publisher  | Free Press |

## Images

![Free Will - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81owPDCGqKL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ an accessible chew on the gristle of this fundamental and intriguing problem
*by N***L on 18 January 2014*

This is a short book in which Harris pretty convincingly argues the case against the idea that we can do other than we do and also briefly considers the motivational, moral and political implications of accepting such a view. Central to Harris's argument is his view that not only is free will incompatible with objective descriptions of behaviour but also with our subjective experience: thus "the illusion of free will is in itself an illusion". In our subjective experience thoughts arise and take hold (or not) in ways that are subjectively if not theoretically mysterious (i.e. theoretically they arise from our brain states that are in themselves formed of chains of biologically coded influence). He writes vividly of his own 'choices' to show the determinism that is apparent if one carefully reflects on ordinary experience; "the choice you make will come out of the darkness of prior causes that you, the conscious witness of your experience, did not bring into being". He acknowledges, however, that our efforts matter and that we can alter the framework of our influences to make certain kinds of 'choices' more likely. He rejects that this entails free will but insofar as it acknowledges that we are causally relevant agents in the direction of our lives it seems to me that he comes close. If you find this review a bit heavy going, that is because I have needed to be succinct - the book itself is a much easier read. I recommend this book strongly to anyone who wants an accessible chew on the gristle of this fundamental and intriguing problem. Of course, whether or not you choose to follow this up is all a matter of determinism...

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ I couldn't help but like this book.
*by G***W on 31 December 2014*

I've read all six of Sam Harris's books in the last few months, and picking a favourite would be like asking a mother to pick her favourite child, but if I had to rank them from "best" to just "excellent", Free Will would come near the top. Drawing on his expertise as both a neuroscientist and an experienced meditator, Harris explores the age-old philosophical question, "do we have free will? Are we truly the conscious authors of our actions, or are we just fixed-track automatons living under the delusion that we have control?" The question itself is nothing new, and numerous answers have been offered over the years, ranging ranging from the interesting and insightful to the confusing, meaningless, and masturbatory. Can Harris bring anything new to the table? To me: yes. Granted, I have no formal training in philosophy and am not familiar with the huge body of work that already exists on this subject, but Free Will isn't intended to be an all-encompassing philosophical treatise to be kept on dusty university library shelves and only ever pondered by PhDs. It's a succinct and incisive opinion piece that's open to all comers, and I found Harris's arguments to be eye-opening and authoritative - delivered with his trademark ability to steamroll any intellectual opponent in his path. Without meaning to spoil the ending, Harris's own answer to the question "do we have free will?" is a resounding "no". His arguments have been formulated in both the philosophy department and the research lab - and I found them convincing from all angles. We don't choose our thoughts - our thoughts simple arise in the brain uninvited, and anyone who's ever tried just 5 minutes of meditation can tell you first-hand how difficult it is to get even a hint of control over the contents of our own heads. Recent advances in brain imaging have also shown that we're able to predict with high accuracy the decisions a person is going to make *long before the person in question feels like they've actually made the decision.* If other people can predict our actions before we even know them ourselves, what space does this leave for free will as the genesis of those actions? I'm not sure there's any, and reading this book has made me acutely aware of just how little of the behaviour I consider to be "me" is the result of conscious choice - if that choice could ever be said to be "conscious" at all. My main criticism of this book is that it's very short - more of a pamphlet than a book - but at £2.99 for the Kindle version, it's not a major complaint. Also, if you've read "Waking Up" by the same author, there's a fair amount of overlap between the two books (including a few passages that seem be copied and pasted directly from one book to the other), so you may get the occasional sense of deja vu as you read Free Will, but its "exclusive" sections are more than enough to justify the low cost and the short amount of time it will take you to read it. Read this book. It's not like you have a choice.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Sam Harris doesn't disappoint, he will answer this question in the most ...
*by R***E on 20 February 2015*

Sam Harris takes on one of the biggest questions about what we think defines humanity. Free Will. Surely that's a given, if we don't have free will, then what can we be, Without Free Will, then we are simply robots? As always, Sam Harris doesn't disappoint, he will answer this question in the most informative and truthful way that he can discover, no matter what the outcome ! As the brilliant scientist Richard Feynman once said ""Nature is there, and she's gonna come out the way she is" Free Will as it seems, is an illusion (which is not really that surprising if you consider the whole nature/nurture process), but to be absolutely critical of Sam's interpretation, he does not go far enough. Sam still eludes to the perception that although free will is eradicated, somehow, what we actually do in real life, is still important in an individual sense ? i.e. - this post would not have happened if I didn't actually write it, and post it ! Is that not the point ? This isn't written and posted due to "Free Will", but simply a pre-conceived response, which was actually determined before I was born. So that's determinism then ? As a post script, I have to yet again thank Sam Harris for producing the most thought compelling books. posts, webcasts et al . What a pleasure it is to read everything he produces (whether I completely agree or not, but 99% do agree) We don't have enough critical thinkers at the moment, or they simply just don't get the "airplay". If you haven't read this book, then please do, and take your time to understand the concepts, as they may be disturbing to what you accept as your own self. It may frighten you, and it may astound you, but whichever way, it will enlighten you !

## Frequently Bought Together

- Free Will [Deckle Edge]
- Waking Up: A Guide to Spirituality Without Religion
- Lying

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