For this experiment, he set up a timer that was similar to an analog clock but moved at a slightly faster rate. Then, he would tell his participants to lift their wrist at certain times (Warburton). He would measure the time it took for them to raise their hand, along with their brain activity that took place during this process. What Libet discovered was that brain activity began hundreds of milliseconds before the physical lifting of the hand (Warburton). To most people, this meant nothing because it was already a well-known assumption that everything we do begins with an idea in our brains. However, this proved that the conscious decision did not cause the movement of the participant’s wrist because the brain activity happened way before the participants actually willed the movement to take place. The decision of the participants to lift their wrists was already determined in the brain hundreds of milliseconds before the action took place; it was not a spur of the moment decision made by the participant (Warburton). Many people who studied this is experiment began to assume that free will was nothing more than allusion. However, Libet had a different viewpoint. Although his experiment proved that the brain prematurely makes decisions before we actually perform any actions, he still believed humans still have a counterpart to free will, which he called “free won’t” …show more content…
In 1962, a theory known as the Technological Determinism Theory was created around this idea, and it stated, “media technology shapes how we as individuals in a society think, feel, act, and how our society operates as we move from one technological age to another” (Caldwell). Much of the effect that technology has on our free will ties back to our basic biology. Technology has benefitted us in many ways. However, it has not come without its side effects. Humans feels as if we are constantly connected now. While this has its benefits, it is harmful to our free will because we are constantly exposed to the world. This is caused by something called the audience effect. We constantly feel we have to be a certain way online because everyone is watching us. This often influences our free will because we have to pretend to be something were not. Baroness Professor Susan Greenfield has stated “Social media gives us an exaggerated, ideal self.” (Horvath). The problem is this ideal, exaggerated version of ourselves is not typically who we are. It is someone we are forced to be. This ties back to our desire for social acceptance, only now it is not only when we are in public, but it is every second of every day. (look up more effects of technology on fsu virtual