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Were the Nazis inherently evil?

Do we have free will, or is it all written in the womb? The neurologist-author of new book looks at the science behind our actions

December 12, 2024 12:53
Guy Leschziner_Headshot
Besetting sin: Dr Guy Leschziner
4 min read

Is being ambitious just about getting ahead, or a sign of an impaired brain? What is the neurological basis of gluttony? Is apathy down to our frontal lobes? Is it all in the genes, or determined from the womb? Is pride a moral failing, or the product of our brains being moulded in childhood?

The answer to those questions could be yes, but also no, and mainly maybe; or so explains Dr Guy Leschziner, whose new book Seven Deadly Sins: The Biology of Being Human delves into the scientific debates behind these notorious vices.

This is Dr Leschziner’s third book, and follows two acclaimed explorations of sleep and our senses. It is a dense read, punctuated by colourful case studies and with a provocative question at its core: do human beings have free will?

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“I’m still very much on the fence,” admits Dr Leschziner, who lives in south west London and works as a consultant neurologist at Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospital, as well as being Professor of Neurology and Sleep Medicine at King’s. “For all of us there are factors beyond our individual control. I suspect that depending on our underlying brain basis, there are individuals who don’t have free will. But if you have the right genetics, the right upbringing, all the other environmental factors that favour your ability to function normally and if free will means that in any situation we can make two or more choices, the majority probably do have it. But there remains a significant proportion of individuals in whom decisions are predetermined.”

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