This book is an excellent example of recent renewed interest in systematic engagement with Buddhist philosophy. Rather than focusing on an exegesis of historical texts, Repetti uses the Buddhist philosophical sources for doing philosophy by developing an intriguing, sophisticated, and characteristically Buddhist approach to the free will problem. Repetti's book shows vividly how the intellectual encounter with Buddhist philosophy can invigorate contemporary philosophical debates.Jan Westerhoff, University of Oxford, UKThis fascinating and discerning study brings arguments and concepts from Western philosophy into dialogue with classical Buddhist ideas. Based on the latter, it argues for the possibility of a freedom of mind and will that is seen as attainable by advanced practitioners of the Buddhist path.Peter Harvey, retired Professor of Buddhist Studies, University of Sunderland, UKRick Repetti is the leading expert in the world on Buddhism and free will. Some say free will is a Western invention, a requirement of the view that posits a God who rewards and punishes for all eternity. Buddhists have no such God, but Repetti forcefully and eloquently argues they too have a conception of free will to account for karma and responsibility. This is cross-cultural philosophy at its very best.Owen Flanagan, Duke University, USA