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This year's eighth panel discussion in the Eppur si muove scientific panel discussion series is dedicated to the question of free will. Do human beings have free will or is it just the illusion of freedom? This is one of the most important, but also the most difficult questions, both in traditional philosophy and modern natural science. The answer to the aforementioned question depends on the fundamental understanding of ourselves – are we mere automatons or free beings – as well as the understanding of our moral responsibility as individuals and as societies. However, our sense of our own freedom is hindered by the inexorable determinism of the natural world, of which the very source of our sense of freedom – the human brain – is a part. This circumstance does not leave us with many options – either determinism is true and free will does not exist, or free will is in a certain way compatible with determinism, or else free will exists and determinism is not true. But how can free will be compatible with determinism? Also, what would it mean to save free will by denying determinism, for example, by the indeterminism of quantum theory? Doesn't this make freedom just randomness, and not freedom of choice, without which there is no moral responsibility? These and other philosophical and physical aspects of the problem of free will will be discussed at the panel discussion. The editor and moderator is Dr. Boris Kožnjak, philosopher at the Institute of Philosophy in Zagreb. The participants are Dr. Filip Grgić, philosopher at the Institute of Philosophy in Zagreb and Assoc. Prof. Dr. Ivica Smolić, physicist at the Department of Physics at the Faculty of Science in Zagreb. Organizer of the scientific panel discussion program: Zagreb City Libraries, City Library. Editor of the panel discussion cycle Ismena Meić. The eighth panel discussion of this year's Eppur si muove panel discussion cycle was held on Wednesday, December 11, 2019 at 7 p.m. in the Kupola Gallery of the City Library.