willing is socially defined as the volentarely acts or decision making to realise a dream or projects. how these procedures take place in the brain and how neurosciences explain them?
I suggest the classic, the Illusion of Conscious Will by Wegner, it goes into some of the neuroscience behind will, and the psychology that that implies. It also calls into question the assumption of will, and willpower, and suggests that what we think is will is just a shortcut the brain takes to attribute agency to itself. That there quite literally is no force guiding consciously our actions, instead unconscious threads of control, are smushed together into consciousness, and blamed for control because they are the last conscious results preceding action.
Thanks so much dear professors Weiss, I find it so interesting as article treating the issue of willing from a point of view neurosciences. it is concise and precise thank you.
Also Pr. Smith for your logic and very wise comments.