Daniel C. Dennett is Co-Director of the Center for Cognitive Science and the Austin B. Fletcher Professor of Philosophy at Tufts University. Gregg D. Caruso is Professor of Philosophy at SUNY Corning and Honorary Professor of Philosophy at Macquarie University.
Just Deserts is a delight: a sharp and interesting discussion of punishment, morality, choice, and much else ... perfect for a newcomer to the free will debates. Paul Bloom, Yale University, author of Against Empathy This is a very lively, engaging, and thoughtful debate between two well-informed and insightful philosophers. It is written in a very accessible style, and students and even scholars in other disciplines or sub-fields of philosophy will learn from it and find themselves drawn in. It does not just re-hash traditional debates, but pushes the frontiers outward. Highly recommended. John Martin Fischer, Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at UC Riverside What it means to make a choice, to deserve praise or blame, to do the right thing - these are all at stake in the debate over free will. Here you will find two different viewpoints, elaborated and defended by true masters. Given the sharpness of both interlocutors, neither has anywhere to hide; a wide spectrum of important points are laid out for careful consideration. Sean Carroll, author of The Big Picture: On the Origins of Life, Meaning, and the Universe Itself A philosophical debate in the grand style. Caruso and Dennett play in the philosophical equivalent of a three set tennis championship where the prize is whether free will exists or not and what this means for reward, punishment, and the criminal law. Serve, volley, amazing gets, overheads, long rallies, a few trick shots, several match points. Really smart play from two philosophers at the top of their games. Owen Flanagan, James B. Duke Distinguished University Professor, Duke University This is a spirited and enlightening debate between an influential defender of compatibilism about freedom, responsibility and determinism (Dennett) and an astute defender of a hard incompatibilist or free will skeptical position (Caruso). The book breaks new ground on many issues; and it has made clearer to me than anything else I have ever read on the subject how central is the issue of Just Deserts to age-old debates about free will, moral responsibility and determinism. Robert Kane, University Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Philosophy and Law, University of Texas at Austin It reminds you just how important and difficult and vitally alive philosophical debate can be. Jenann T. Ismael, Columbia University, author of How Physics Makes Us Free Vigorous Nature