Difference between revisions of "Philosophy of mind" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
(import)
 
 
(58 intermediate revisions by 8 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 +
{{Approved}}{{Images OK}}{{Submitted}}{{Paid}}{{Copyedited}}
 
[[Image:Phrenology1.jpg|thumb|200px|A [[Phrenology|Phrenological]] mapping of the [[brain]]. Phrenology was among the first attempts to correlate mental functions with specific parts of the brain.]]
 
[[Image:Phrenology1.jpg|thumb|200px|A [[Phrenology|Phrenological]] mapping of the [[brain]]. Phrenology was among the first attempts to correlate mental functions with specific parts of the brain.]]
'''Philosophy of mind''' is the branch of [[philosophy]] that studies the nature of the [[mind]], [[mental event]]s, [[mental function]]s, [[mental property|mental properties]] and [[consciousness]], and their relationship to the physical body. The ''mind-body problem'', i.e. the relationship of the mind to the body, is commonly seen as the central issue in philosophy of mind, although there are other issues concerning the nature of the mind that do not involve its relation to the physical body.<ref name="Kim1">{{cite book
+
'''Philosophy of mind''' is the branch of philosophy that studies the nature of the mind, mental events, mental functions, mental properties and [[consciousness]], and their relationship to the physical body. The ''mind-body problem,'' namely, the question of how the mind relates to the body, is commonly seen as the central issue in philosophy of mind, although there are other issues concerning the nature of the mind that do not involve its relation to the physical body.
| last = Kim
+
{{toc}}
| first = J.
+
== Overview==
| editor = Honderich, Ted
+
''[[Dualism]]'' and ''[[monism]]'' are the two major schools of thought that attempt to resolve the mind-body problem. ''Dualism'' is the position that mind and body are in some way separate from each other. It can be traced back at least to [[Plato]],<ref name=Plato>Plato, ''Phaedo,'' Edited by E.A. Duke, W.F. Hicken, W.S.M. Nicoll, D.B. Robinson, and J.C.G. Strachan, (London: Clarendon Press, 1995).</ref> [[Aristotle]]<ref>H. Robinson, "Aristotelian dualism," ''Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy,'' 1 (Oxford University Press, 1983), 123-144.</ref> <ref> Martha C. Nussbaum, "Aristotelian dualism," ''Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy,'' 2 (Oxford University Press, 1984), 197-207.</ref><ref>Martha C. Nussbaum and A.O. Rorty, (eds.)''Essays on Aristotle's De Anima'' (London: Clarendon Press, 1992).</ref> and the [[Sankhya]] and [[Yoga]] schools of [[Hinduism|Hindu]] philosophy, but received its most influential formulation by [[René Descartes]] in the seventeenth century.<ref name=Descartes>René Descartes, ''Discourse on Method and Meditations on First Philosophy'' (Hacket Publishing Company, ISBN 0872204219).</ref> ''Substance dualists'' argue that the mind is an independently existing substance, whereas ''Property dualists'' maintain that the mind is a group of independent properties that emerge from and cannot be reduced to the brain, though they are ontologically dependent on it.<ref>W.D. Hart, "Dualism," in Samuel Guttenplan (org) ''A Companion to the Philosophy of Mind'' (London: Blackwell, Oxford University Press, 1996), 265-267. </ref>
| others =  
 
| title = Problems in the Philosophy of Mind. Oxford Companion to Philosophy
 
| year = 1995
 
| publisher = Oxford University Press
 
| location = Oxford
 
| id =
 
| doi =
 
}} <!--Kim, J., "Problems in the Philosophy of Mind". ''Oxford Companion to Philosophy''. Ted Honderich (ed.) Oxford:Oxford University Press. 1995.—></ref>  
 
  
''[[Dualism (philosophy of mind)|Dualism]]'' and ''[[monism]]'' are the two major schools of thought that attempt to resolve the mind-body problem. ''Dualism'' is the position that mind and body are in some way separate from each other. It can be traced back to [[Plato]],<ref name="Plato">{{cite book
+
''Monism'' rejects the dualist separation and maintains that mind and body are, at the most fundamental level, of the same kind. This view seems to have first been advocated in [[Western Philosophy]] by [[Parmenides]] in the fifth century B.C.E. and was later espoused by the seventeenth century [[Rationalism|rationalist]] [[Baruch Spinoza]].<ref name=Spinoza>Baruch Spinoza, ''Tractatus Theologico-Politicus'' (A Theologico-Political Treatise), (1670).</ref> Rough parallels in [[Eastern Philosophy]] might be the Hindu concept of [[Brahman]] or the [[Dao]] of [[Lao Tzu]]. ''Physicalists'' argue that only the entities postulated by physical theory exist, and that mind is ultimately nothing more than such physical entities. ''[[idealism |Idealists]]'' maintain that minds (along with their perceptions and ideas) are all that exists and that the external world is either mental itself, or an illusion created by the mind. The most common monisms in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries have all been variations of physicalism; these positions include [[behaviorism]], the [[type physicalism|type identity theory]], and [[anomalous monism]].<ref name=Kim>J. Kim, "Mind-Body Problem," ''Oxford Companion to Philosophy,'' edited by Ted Honderich (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 1995).</ref>
| author = Plato
 
| editor =  E.A. Duke, W.F. Hicken, W.S.M. Nicoll, D.B. Robinson, J.C.G. Strachan
 
| title = Phaedo
 
| edition =
 
| year = 1995
 
| publisher = Clarendon Press
 
| location =
 
| id =
 
}}<!--{{cite book | author=Plato | title=Phaedo}} ed. E.A. Duke, W.F. Hicken, W.S.M. Nicoll, D.B. Robinson and J.C.G. Strachan, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1995.—></ref> [[Aristotle]]<ref name="Rob">Robinson, H. (1983): ‘Aristotelian dualism’, Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 1, 123-44.</ref><ref> Nussbaum, M. C. (1984): ‘Aristotelian dualism’, Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy, 2, 197-207.</ref><ref>Nussbaum, M. C. and Rorty, A. O. (1992): Essays on Aristotle's De Anima, Clarendon Press, Oxford.</ref> and the [[Sankhya]] and [[Yoga]] schools of [[Hinduism|Hindu]] philosophy,<ref name="Sa">{{cite web | url=http://www.experiencefestival.com/a/Sankhya/id/23117
 
| title=Sankhya:Hindu philosophy: The Sankhya| author=Sri Swami Sivananda}}</ref> but it was most precisely formulated by [[René Descartes]] in the 17th century.<ref name="De">{{cite book | author=Descartes, René | title=Discourse on Method and Meditations on First Philosophy | publisher=Hacket Publishing Company | id=ISBN 0-87220-421-9 }}</ref> ''[[Dualism (philosophy of mind)|Substance dualists]]'' argue that the mind is an independently existing substance, whereas ''[[Property dualism|Property dualists]]'' maintain that the mind is a group of independent properties that [[emergentism|emerge]] from and cannot be reduced to the brain, but that it is not a distinct substance.<ref name="Du">Hart, W.D. (1996) "Dualism", in Samuel Guttenplan (org) ''A Companion to the Philosophy of Mind'', Blackwell, Oxford, 265-7. </ref>
 
  
''Monism'' rejects the [[Dualist|dualist]] separation and maintains that mind and body emerge in a universe that has no [[ontology|ontological]] divisions. This view was first advocated in [[Western Philosophy]] by [[Parmenides]] in the 5th Century B.C.E. and was later espoused by the 17th Century [[Rationalism|rationalist]] [[Baruch Spinoza]].<ref name="Spin"> Spinoza, Baruch (1670) ''Tractatus Theologico-Politicus'' (A Theologico-Political Treatise).</ref> Rough parallels in [[Eastern Philosophy]] might be the Hindu concept of [[Brahman]] or the [[Tao]] of [[Lao Tzu]]. ''[[Physicalism|Physicalists]]'' argue that only the entities postulated by physical theory exist, and that mind is ultimately nothing more than such physical entities. ''[[idealism (philosophy)|Idealists]]'' maintain that the mind is all that exists and that the external world is either mental itself, or an illusion created by the mind. ''[[neutral monism|Neutral monists]]'' adhere to the position that there is some other, neutral substance, and that both matter and mind are properties of this unknown substance. The most common monisms in the 20th and 21st centuries have all been variations of physicalism; these positions include [[behaviorism]], the [[type physicalism|type identity theory]], [[anomalous monism]] and [[functionalism (philosophy of mind)|functionalism]].<ref name="Kim">Kim, J., "Mind-Body Problem", ''Oxford Companion to Philosophy''. Ted Honderich (ed.). Oxford:Oxford University Press. 1995.</ref>
+
Many modern philosophers of mind adopt either a ''reductive'' or ''non-reductive physicalist'' position, maintaining in their different ways that only the mind is not something separate from the brain.<ref name=Kim/> ''Reductivists'' assert that all mental states and properties can in principle be explained by neuroscientific accounts of brain processes and states.<ref name=Churchland1986>Patricia Churchland, ''Neurophilosophy: Toward a Unified Science of the Mind-Brain'' (MIT Press, 1986).</ref><ref name=Churchland1981>Paul Churchland, "Eliminative Materialism and the Propositional Attitudes," ''Journal of Philosophy'' (1981): 67-90.</ref><ref>J.J.C. Smart, "Sensations and Brain Processes," ''Philosophical Review'' (1956).</ref> ''Non-reductionists'' argue that although the brain is all there ''is'' to the mind, mental states and properties cannot ultimately be explained in the terms of the physical sciences (such a view is often expressed by focusing on predicates of a mental sort, such as 'is seeing red').<ref>Donald Davidson, ''Essays on Actions and Events'' (Oxford University Press, 1980, ISBN 0199246270). </ref><ref>Hilary Putnam, "Psychological Predicates," in W.H. Capitan and D.D. Merrill, eds., ''Art, Mind and Religion'' (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1967). </ref> Continued [[neuroscience|neuroscientific]] progress has helped to clarify some of these issues. However, they are far from having been resolved, and modern philosophers of mind continue to ask how the subjective qualities and the intentionality (aboutness) of mental states and properties can be explained in the terms of the natural sciences.<ref> Daniel Dennett, ''The Intentional Stance'' (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1998, ISBN 0262540533). </ref><ref name=Searle>John Searle, ''Intentionality: A Paper on the Philosophy of Mind'' (Frankfurt a. M.: Nachdr. Suhrkamp, 2001, ISBN 3518285564). </ref>
  
Many modern philosophers of mind adopt either a ''reductive'' or ''non-reductive physicalist'' position, maintaining in their different ways that only the mind is not something separate from the brain. <ref name="Kim" /> ''Reductivists'' assert that all mental states and properties will eventually be explained by neuroscientific accounts of brain processes and states.<ref name="Pat">{{cite book | author=Churchland, Patricia | title=Neurophilosophy: Toward a Unified Science of the Mind-Brain. | publisher=MIT Press | year=1986 | id=ISBN 0-262-03116-7 }}</ref><ref name="Paul">{{cite journal | author=Churchland, Paul | title=Eliminative Materialism and the Propositional Attitudes | journal=Journal of Philosophy | year=1981 | pages=67-90}}</ref><ref name="Smart"> {{cite journal | author=Smart, J.J.C. | title=Sensations and Brain Processes | journal=Philosophical Review | year=1956}}</ref> ''Non-reductionists'' argue that although the brain is all there ''is'' to the mind, the predicates and vocabulary used in mental descriptions and explanations are indispensable, and cannot be reduced to the language and lower-level explanations of physical science.<ref name="Davidson">{{cite book | author=Donald Davidson | title=Essays on Actions and Events | publisher=Oxford University Press | year=1980 | id=ISBN 0-19-924627-0 }}</ref><ref name="Pu"> Putnam, Hilary (1967). "Psychological Predicates", in W. H. Capitan and D. D. Merrill, eds., ''Art, Mind and Religion'' (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press.</ref> Continued [[neuroscience|neuroscientific]] progress has helped to clarify some of these issues. However, they are far from having been resolved, and modern philosophers of mind continue to ask how the subjective qualities and the intentionality (aboutness) of mental states and properties can  be explained in naturalistic terms.<ref name="Int">{{cite book | author=Dennett, Daniel | title=The intentional stance | publisher=MIT Press | location=Cambridge, Mass. |year=1998 |id=ISBN 0-262-54053-3 }}</ref><ref name="Searleint">{{cite book | author=Searle, John | title=Intentionality. A Paper on the Philosophy of Mind | publisher=Nachdr. Suhrkamp | location=Frankfurt a. M. | year=2001 |id=ISBN 3-518-28556-4 }}</ref>
+
==The mind-body problem==
 +
{{readout||right|250px|The most important issue in the philosophy of mind is the "mind-body" problem, or the relationship between the [[mind]] and the body}}  
 +
The mind-body problem concerns the explanation of the relationship, if any, that obtains between minds, or mental processes, and bodily states or processes. One way to get an intuitive grip on the problem is to consider the following line of thought:
 +
 
 +
Each of us spends much of our day dealing with ordinary physical objects, like tables, chairs, cars, computers, food, etc. Though some of these objects are much more complex than others, they seem to have a great deal in common. This commonality is brought out by our belief that every feature of these objects can be explained by physics. Each object is clearly just a bunch of particles arranged in a certain way, so that (with sufficient energy) each could—in principle—be turned into another. In other words, they all seem to be made out of the same sort of ''stuff,'' and their properties are just a function of how that stuff is arranged. Intuitively, our bodies are no exceptions to this. While they are much more complex than any machine we can currently make, we believe our bodies are made up of the same stuff as our simplest machines (e.g., protons, neutrons and electrons).
 +
 
 +
At the same time, we also believe that there are mental things in the universe. If you and a friend are looking at a statue from different sides, you might ask your friend what her experience of the statue was like. You might then compare your experiences - while the color of the statue might have been more prominent in your experience, the shape might have been more prominent in hers. This just shows that we think that there's a certain kind of thing, an 'experience' that makes up part of the world, and we attribute these experiences to minds.
 +
 
 +
Now we ask: are these minds and their experiences a sort of physical object? Not obviously.  Experiences don't seem to be made up of particles. They certainly seem to have some important relation to a certain set of particles (those that make up our brains and bodies), but if (for instance) we were to divide a brain in half, we wouldn't think that experiences would somehow split in half. Moreover, while it's clear that experiences can be about objects, it's not at all clear how some bunch of particles could be 'about' anything at all.
  
==The mind-body problem==
+
To put the point slightly differently, imagine that someone were describing a possible universe to you, and gave you a very long list of particle locations. No matter how detailed that list, it would seem that there's a very reasonable question you could ask: are there any minds in this universe? A certain arrangement of particles is clearly sufficient for a book to exist, but the same isn't obviously true for minds and experiences.
The mind-body problem concerns the explanation of the relationship, if any, that obtains between [[mind]]s, or mental processes, and bodily states or processes.<ref name="Kim1" /> One of the aims of philosophers who work in this area is to explain how a supposedly non-material mind can influence a material body and vice-versa.  
 
  
Our perceptual experiences depend on [[stimulation|stimuli]] which arrive at our various [[Sensory system|sensory organs]] from the external world and these stimuli cause changes in our mental states; ultimately causing us to feel a sensation, which may be pleasant or unpleasant. Someone's desire for a slice of pizza, for example, will tend to cause that person to move their body in a specific manner and in a specific direction to obtain what they want. The question, then, is how it can be possible for conscious experiences to arise out of an inert lump of gray matter endowed with nothing but electrochemical properties.<ref name="Kim" />  A related problem is to explain how someone's [[propositional attitude]]s (e.g. beliefs and desires) can cause that individual's [[neuron]]s to fire and his muscles to contract in exactly the correct manner. These comprise some of the puzzles that have confronted [[Epistemology|epistemologists]] and philosophers of mind from at least the time of [[René Descartes]].<ref name="De" />
+
There are both [[metaphysics|metaphysical]] and [[epistemology|epistemological]] aspects to this problem. On the metaphysical side, we might wonder about whether minds and bodies are distinct substances, whether they could exist independently of each other, and whether they have different properties. On the epistemological side, we might wonder whether neuroscience will ever be able to fully explain the nature of minds and experiences.
  
 
==Dualist solutions to the mind-body problem==
 
==Dualist solutions to the mind-body problem==
[[Dualism (philosophy of mind)|Dualism]] is a set of views about the relationship between [[mind]] and [[matter]]. It begins with the claim that mental [[phenomenon|phenomena]] are, in some respects, non-[[nature|physical]].<ref name="Du" /> One of the earliest known formulations of mind-body dualism was expressed in the eastern [[Sankhya]] and [[Yoga]] schools of Hindu philosophy (c. 650 BCE), which divided the world into [[purusha]] (mind/spirit) and [[prakrti]] (material substance).<ref name="Sa" /> Specifically, the [[Yoga Sutra]] of [[Patanjali]] presents an analytical approach to the nature of the mind.
+
[[Dualism]] is a family of views about the relationship between [[mind]] and physical matter. It begins with the claim that mental phenomena are, in some respects, non-physical. One of the earliest known formulations of mind-body dualism was expressed in the eastern [[Sankhya]] and [[Yoga]] schools of Hindu philosophy (c. 650 B.C.E.), which divided the world into [[purusha]] (mind/spirit) and [[prakrti]] (material substance).
  
In [[Western Philosophy]], the earliest discussions of dualist ideas are in the writings of [[Plato]] and [[Aristotle]]. Each of these maintained, but for different reasons, that man's "intelligence" (a faculty of the mind or soul) could not be identified with, or explained in terms of, his physical body.<ref name="Plato" /><ref name="Rob" /> However, the best-known version of dualism is due to [[René Descartes]] (1641), and holds that the mind is a non-extended, non-physical substance.<ref name="De" /> Descartes was the first to clearly identify the mind with [[consciousness]] and [[self-awareness]], and to distinguish this from the brain, which was the seat of intelligence. He was therefore the first to formulate the mind-body problem in the form in which it still exists today.<ref name="De" />
+
In [[Western Philosophy]], some of the earliest discussions of dualist ideas are in the writings of [[Plato]] and [[Aristotle]]. Each of these maintained, but for different reasons, that man's "intelligence" (a faculty of the mind or soul) could not be identified with, or explained in terms of, his physical body.<ref name=Plato/> However, the best-known version of dualism is due to [[René Descartes]] (expressed in his 1641 ''Meditations on First Philosophy''), and holds that the mind is a non-extended, non-physical substance.<ref name=Descartes/> Descartes was the first to clearly identify the mind with [[consciousness]] and [[self-awareness]], and to distinguish this from the brain, which was the seat of intelligence.
  
 
===Arguments for dualism===
 
===Arguments for dualism===
The main argument in favor of dualism is that it seems to appeal to the common-sense intuition of the vast majority of non-philosophically-trained people. If asked what the mind is, the average person will usually respond by identifying it with their [[self]], their [[personality]], their [[soul]], or some other such entity. They will almost certainly deny that the mind simply ''is'' the brain, or vice-versa, finding the idea that there is just one [[ontology|ontological]] entity at play to be too mechanistic, or simply unintelligible.<ref name="Du" /> The majority of modern philosophers of mind think that these intuitions, like many others, are probably misleading and that we should use our critical faculties, along with empirical evidence from the sciences, to examine these assumptions and  determine if there is any real basis to them.<ref name="Du" />
+
Two of the most famous arguments for dualism were given their classic formulations by Descartes. The first is often referred to as the Conceivability Argument. In broad outline, it runs as follows: though they presently exist together somehow, I am capable of forming a clear and distinct conception of my mind existing without my body, and an equally clear and distinct conception of my body existing without my mind. Unlike some other forms of imagining, clear and distinct perception is of an especially reliable sort (Descartes believed that that premise required an argument that God had given us our faculties and was not a deceiver), so we can conclude that the mind and body are indeed independent. The contemporary philosopher David Chalmers has recently provided detailed discussion and defense of this sort of argument.<ref name=Chalmers>David Chalmers, ''The Conscious Mind'' (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 1997).</ref>
 +
 
 +
Descartes' second argument is often referred to as the Divisibility Argument. That outline proceeds roughly as follows: my body/brain and all its parts are divisible, yet my mind is utterly simple and indivisible, so my mind cannot be identical to my body/brain or any part thereof. This argument rests heavily on the notion of 'divisibility,' and there is some challenge in finding an understanding of it that doesn't make the argument question-begging. A recent defense of a more sophisticated form of the Divisibility Argument  can be found in Peter Unger's ''All the Power in the World.''<ref>Peter Unger, ''All the Power in the World'' (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2006).</ref>
  
Another important argument in favor of dualism is the idea that the mental and the physical seem to have quite different, and perhaps irreconcilable, properties.<ref name="Ja">Jackson, F. (1982) “[http://members.aol.com/NeoNoetics/Mary.html Epiphenomenal Qualia].” Reprinted in Chalmers, David ed. :2002. ''Philosophy of Mind: Classical and Contemporary Readings''. Oxford University Press.</ref> Mental events have a certain subjective quality to them, whereas physical events do not. So, for example, one can reasonably ask what burnt finger feels like, or what a blue sky looks, or what nice music sounds like to person. But it is meaningless, or at least odd, to ask what a surge in the uptake of [[glutamate]] in the dorsolateral portion of the [[hippocampus]] feels likes.  
+
A popular contemporary line of argument in favor of dualism centers on the idea that the mental and the physical seem to have quite different, and perhaps irreconcilable, properties.<ref name=Jackson>Frank Jackson, “Epiphenomenal Qualia.” Reprinted in David Chalmers, ed. ''Philosophy of Mind: Classical and Contemporary Readings'' (Oxford University Press, 2002). </ref> Mental events have a certain subjective quality to them, whereas physical events do not. So, for example, one can reasonably ask what a burnt finger feels like to a person, or what a blue sky looks like to a mind, or what nice music sounds like to the person hearing it. But it is meaningless, or at least odd, to ask what a surge in the uptake of glutamate in the dorsolateral portion of the hippocampus feels like.  
  
Philosophers of mind call the subjective aspects of mental events ''[[qualia]]'' (or ''raw feels'').<ref name="Ja" /> There is something ''that it is like'' to feel pain, to see a familiar shade of blue, and so on. There are qualia involved in these mental events that seem particularly difficult to reduce to anything physical.<ref name="Nagel">{{cite journal | author=Nagel, T. | title=What is it like to be a bat? | journal=Philosophical Review | issue=83 | pages=435-456 |year=1974.}}</ref>
+
Philosophers of mind call the subjective aspects of mental events ''[[qualia]]'' (or ''raw feels'').<ref name=Jackson/> There is something 'that it is like' to feel pain, to see a familiar shade of blue, and so on. There are qualia involved in these mental events that seem particularly difficult to reduce to or explain in terms of anything physical.<ref name=Nagel>T. Nagel, "What is it like to be a bat?" ''Philosophical Review'' 83(1974): 435-456. </ref>
  
 
===Interactionist dualism===
 
===Interactionist dualism===
[[Image:Descartes.jpg|thumb|Portrait of [[René Descartes]] by [[Frans Hals]] (1648)]]
+
[[Image:Descartes.jpg|thumb|200px|Portrait of [[René Descartes]] by [[Frans Hals]] (1648)]]
Interactionist dualism, or simply interactionism, is the particular form of dualism first espoused by Descartes in the ''Meditations''.<ref name="De" /> In the 20th century, its major defenders have been [[Karl Popper]] and [[John Carew Eccles]].<ref name="PopE">{{cite book | author=Popper, Karl and Eccles, John | title=The Self and Its Brain | publisher=Springer Verlag | year=2002 | id=ISBN 3-492-21096-1 }}</ref> It is the view that mental states, such as beliefs and desires, causally interact with physical states.<ref name="Du" /
+
Interactionist dualism, or simply interactionism, is the particular form of dualism first espoused by Descartes in the ''Meditations.''<ref name=Descartes/> In the twentieth century, two of its major defenders have been [[Karl Popper]] and John Carew Eccles.<ref>Karl Popper and John Eccles, ''The Self and Its Brain'' (Springer Verlag, 2002, ISBN 3492210961).</ref>  
 
 
Descartes' famous argument for this position can be summarized as follows: Seth has a clear and distinct idea of his mind as a thinking thing which has no spatial extension (i.e., it cannot be measured in terms of length, weight, height, and so on). He also has a clear and distinct idea of his body as something that is spatially extended, subject to quantification and not able to think. It follows that mind and body are not identical because they have radically different properties, according to Descartes.<ref name="De" />
 
  
At the same time, however, it is clear that Seth's mental states (desires, beliefs, etc.) have [[causality|causal]] effects on his body and vice-versa: A child touches a hot stove (physical event) which causes pain (mental event) and makes him yell (physical event), this in turn provokes a sense of fear and protectiveness in the mother (mental event) and so on.
+
This view makes a natural step beyond the basic claim that the mind and body are two distinct substances, and adds that they causally influence each other. One simple but clear case would be the following: something bites my arm; a signal is sent to my brain and then to my mind. My mind then makes the decision to brush the biting thing away, sending a message to my brain, which then sends a message to the arms to do the brushing.
  
Descartes' argument crucially depends on the premise that what Seth believes to be "clear and distinct" ideas in his mind are necessarily true. Many contemporary philosophers doubt this. For example, [[Joseph Agassi]] believes that several academic innovations made since the early [[20th century]] have undermined the idea of privileged access to one's own ideas. [[Sigmund Freud|Freud]] has shown that a psychologically-trained observer can understand a person's unconscious motivations better than she does. [[Pierre Duhem|Duhem]] has shown that a philosopher of science can know a person's methods of discovery better than he does, while [[Bronislaw Malinowski|Malinowski]] has shown that an anthropologist can know a person's customs and habits better than he does. He also asserts that modern psychological experiments that cause people to see things that are not there provide grounds for rejecting Descartes' argument because scientists can describe a person's perceptions better than he can.<ref>{{cite book | author=Agassi, J. | title=La Scienza in Divenire | publisher=Armando | location=Rome | year=1997}}</ref>
+
The most difficult part of this story, to make sense of it, concerns the communication between the (physical) brain and the (non-physical) mind. Descartes believed that the pineal gland in the center of the brain was the spot of communication, but could offer no further explanation. After all, while we have some grasp on the laws that govern communication of motion between physical bodies, and the psychological laws that describe how certain thoughts lead to other thoughts; no known set of laws seems fit, to describe the way in which the physical and the mental (when conceived as non-physical) interact. Indeed, the sort of interaction in question seems to be inconceivable (an especially sensitive point for dualists who base their position on the Conceivability Argument).
  
 
===Other forms of dualism===
 
===Other forms of dualism===
[[Image:Dualism.png|400px|thumb|Three varieties of dualism. The arrows indicate the direction of the causal interactions. Property dualism is not shown.]]
+
1) Psycho-physical parallelism, or simply '''''parallelism''''', is the view that mind and body, while having distinct ontological statuses, do not causally influence one another. Instead, they run along parallel paths (mind events causally interact with mind events and brain events causally interact with brain events) and only '''seem''' to influence each other. This view was most prominently defended by [[Gottfried Leibniz]]. Although Leibniz was an ontological monist who believed that only one fundamental substance, [[monad]]s, exists in the universe and that everything (including physical matter) is reducible to it, he nonetheless maintained that there was an important distinction between "the mental" and "the physical" in terms of causation. He held that God had arranged things in advance so that minds and bodies would be in harmony with each other. This is known as the doctrine of [[pre-established harmony]].<ref>Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, ''Monadology'' (1714).</ref>
  
1) [[Parallelism|Psycho-physical parallelism]], or simply '''''parallelism''''', is the view that mind and body, while having distinct ontological statuses, do not causally influence one another. Instead, they run along parallel paths (mind events causally interact with mind events and brain events causally interact with brain events) and only '''seem''' to influence each other.<ref name="DuSEP">{{cite web
+
[[Image:Gottfried_Wilhelm_von_Leibniz.jpg|thumb|200px|Portrait of [[Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz]] by Bernhard Christoph Francke (circa 1700)]]
| url = http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/fall2003/entries/dualism/
 
| title = Dualism
 
| accessdate = 2006-09-25
 
| author =
 
| last = Robinson
 
| first = Howard
 
| authorlink =
 
| coauthors =
 
| date = 2003-08-19
 
| work = The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Fall 2003 Edition)
 
| publisher = Center for the Study of Language and Information, Stanford University
 
| pages =
 
| language =
 
| archiveurl =
 
| archivedate =
 
}} </ref>  This view was most prominently defended by [[Gottfried Leibniz]]. Although Leibniz was an ontological monist who believed that only one fundamental substance, [[monad]]s, exists in the universe and that everything is reducible to it, he nonetheless maintained that there was an important distinction between "the mental" and "the physical" in terms of causation. He held that God had arranged things in advance so that minds and bodies would be in harmony with each other. This is known as the doctrine of [[pre-established harmony]].<ref>{{cite book | last=Leibniz | first=Gottfried Wilhelm | title=Monadology | origyear=1714}}</ref>
 
  
[[Image:Gottfried_Wilhelm_von_Leibniz.jpg|thumb|Portrait of [[Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz]] by Bernhard Christoph Francke (circa 1700)]]
+
2) [[Occasionalism]] is the view espoused most notably by [[Nicholas Malebranche]] which asserts that all supposedly causal relations between physical events, or between physical and mental events, are not really causal at all. While body and mind are still different substances, causes (whether mental or physical) are related to their effects by an act of God's intervention on each specific occasion. For instance, my decision to raise my arm is merely the occasion on which God causes my arm to raise. Likewise, the motion of particles which constitute my finger's being pricked is the occasion on which God causes a sensation of pain to appear in my brain.
  
2) [[Occasionalism]] is the view espoused by [[Nicholas Malebranche]] which asserts that all supposedly causal relations between physical events, or between physical and mental events, are not really causal at all. While body and mind are still different substances, causes (whether mental or physical) are related to their effects by an act of God's intervention on each specific occasion.<ref>{{cite web
+
3) [[Epiphenomenalism]] is a doctrine first formulated by Shadworth Hodgson,<ref>Shadworth Hollway Hodgson, ''Time and Space: a Metaphysical Essay'' (HardPress Publishing, 2019 (original 1865), ISBN 978-0461030402).</ref> but with precedents going back as far as Plato. Fundamentally, it consists in the view that mental phenomena are causally ineffectual. Physical events can cause other physical events and physical events can cause mental events, but mental events cannot cause anything, since they are just causally inert by-products (i.e., ''epiphenomena'') of the physical world. The view has been defended most strongly in recent times by [[Frank Cameron Jackson|Frank Jackson]].<ref>Frank Jackson, "What Mary didn't know." ''Journal of Philosophy'' (1986): 291-295.</ref>
| url = http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2002/entries/malebranche/
 
| title = Nicolas Malebranche
 
| accessdate = 2006-09-25
 
| last = Schmaltz
 
| first = Tad
 
| date =
 
| year = 2002
 
| format =
 
| work = The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2002 Edition)
 
| publisher = Center for the Study of Language and Information, Stanford University
 
| archiveurl =
 
| archivedate =
 
}}<!--Schmaltz, Tad, "Nicolas Malebranche", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2002 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.), URL=<http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2002/entries/malebranche/>—></ref>
 
  
3) [[Epiphenomenalism]] is a doctrine first formulated by [[Thomas Henry Huxley]].<ref> Huxley, T. H. [1874] "On the Hypothesis that Animals are Automata, and its History", ''The Fortnightly Review'', n.s.16:555-580. Reprinted in ''Method and Results: Essays by Thomas H. Huxley'' (New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1898).</ref>  Fundamentally, it consists in the view that mental phenomena are causally ineffectual. Physical events can cause other physical events and physical events can cause mental events, but mental events cannot cause anything, since they are just causally inert by-products (i.e. ''epiphenomena'') of the physical world.<ref name="DuSEP" /> The view has been defended most strongly in recent times by [[Frank Cameron Jackson|Frank Jackson]].<ref>{{cite journal | author=Jackson, Frank | title=What Mary didn't know | journal=Journal of Philosophy. | year=1986, |pages=291-295}}</ref>
+
4) [[Property dualism]] asserts that when matter is organized in the appropriate way (i.e. in the way that living human bodies are organized), mental properties emerge. Hence, it is a sub-branch of [[emergent materialism]]. These emergent properties have an independent ontological status and cannot be reduced to, or explained in terms of, the physical substrate from which they emerge. This position is espoused by [[David Chalmers]] and has undergone something of a renaissance in recent years.<ref name=Chalmers/> Unlike more traditional dualism, this view doesn't involve the claim that the mind is capable of existing independently of physical objects.
  
4) [[Property dualism]] asserts that when matter is organized in the appropriate way (i.e. in the way that living human bodies are organized), mental properties emerge. Hence, it is a sub-branch of [[emergent materialism]].<ref name="Du" /> These emergent properties have an independent ontological status and cannot be reduced to, or explained in terms of, the physical substrate from which they emerge. This position is espoused by [[David Chalmers]] and has undergone something of a renaissance in recent years.<ref>{{cite book | last=Chalmers |first=David | title=The Conscious Mind | publisher=Oxford University Press | year=1997 | id=ISBN 0-19-511789-1 }} </ref>
+
==Monist solutions to the mind-body problem==
 +
[[Image:Spinoza.jpg|thumb|200px|[[Baruch Spinoza|Baruch (de) Spinoza]]]]
 +
In contrast to dualism, monism states that there is only one fundamental substance or type of substance. Today, the most common forms of monism in Western philosophy are [[physicalism|physicalist]].<ref name=Kim/> Physicalistic monism asserts that the only existing substance is physical, in some sense of that term to be clarified by our best science.<ref name=Stoljar>Daniel Stoljar, [http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2005/entries/physicalism/ Physicalism] ''The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy'', 2001. Retrieved June 17, 2020. </ref> Physicalism has been formulated in a wide variety of ways (see below).
  
==Monist solutions to the mind-body problem==
+
Another form of monism, [[idealism]], states that the only existing substance is mental. The most prominent defenders of that view in the Western tradition are [[Leibniz]] and the Irish Bishop [[Berkeley|George Berkeley]].
[[Image:Spinoza.jpg|thumb|[[Baruch Spinoza|Baruch (de) Spinoza]]]]
+
 
In contrast to dualism, monism states that there is only one fundamental substance. Today, the most common forms of monism in Western philosophy are [[physicalism|physicalist]].<ref name="Kim" /> Physicalistic monism asserts that the only existing substance is physical, in some sense of that term to be clarified by our best science.<ref name="Stol">{{cite web
+
Another possibility is to accept the existence of a basic substance which is neither exclusively physical nor exclusively mental. One version of such a position was adopted by the Dutch Jewish philosopher [[Baruch Spinoza]],<ref name=Spinoza/> who held that God was the only substance in the world, and that all particular things (including minds and bodies) were merely affections of God. A rather different version was popularized by [[Ernst Mach]]<ref>E. Mach, ''Die Analyse der Empfindungen und das Verhältnis des Physischen zum Psychischen,'' Fifth edition, translated as ''The Analysis of Sensations and the Relation of Physical to the Psychical'' (New York: Dover, 1959).</ref> in the nineteenth century. This [[neutral monism]], as it is called, bears some resemblance to ''property dualism.''
| url = http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2005/entries/physicalism/
 
| title = Physicalism
 
| accessdate = 2006-09-24
 
| last = Stoljar
 
| first = Daniel
 
| authorlink =
 
| date =
 
| year = 2005
 
| month =
 
| work = The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2005 Edition)
 
| publisher = Center for the Study of Language and Information, Stanford University
 
| archiveurl =
 
| archivedate =
 
}}</ref> However, a variety of formulations are possible (see below). Another form of monism, [[idealism]], states that the only existing substance is mental. It is uncommon in contemporary Western Philosophy.<ref name="Kim" />
 
  
[[Phenomenalism]] is the theory that representations (or [[sense data]]) of external objects, which may have no bearing on the objects themselves, are all that can exist in our minds. It was briefly adopted by [[Bertrand Russell]] and many of the [[logical positivists]] during the early 20th century.<ref> Russell, Bertrand (1918) ''Mysticism and Logic and Other Essays'', London: Longmans, Green. </ref> A third possibility is to accept the existence of a basic substance which is neither physical nor mental. The mental and physical would then both be properties of this neutral substance. Such a position was adopted by [[Baruch Spinoza]]<ref name="Spin" /> and was popularized by [[Ernst Mach]]<ref> Mach, E. (1886) ''Die Analyse der Empfindungen und das Verhältnis des Physischen zum Psychischen.'' Fifth edition translated as ''The Analysis of Sensations and the Relation of Physical to the Psychical'', New York: Dover. 1959 </ref> in the 19th century. This [[neutral monism]], as it is called, resembles ''property dualism''.  
+
===Varieties of Physicalism===
 +
Prior to the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, physics had accomplished relatively little, and theology set many of the starting points for science, making it easier for thinkers to assume that there was more to the universe than described in the language of physics. Today, the claim that physics is the most fundamental science, and that the truths of other sciences can—in principle—be reduced to the truths of physics, is seen by many as almost self-evident. Because of this, many philosophers have seen physicalism monism as irresistible, so that more intellectual energy has been devoted to developing varieties of this view of the mind than any other.
  
===Physicalistic Monisms===
+
====Behaviorism====
 +
[[Behaviorism]] dominated philosophy of mind for much of the twentieth century, especially the first half.<ref name=Kim/> In psychology, behaviorism developed as a reaction to the inadequacies of introspectionism.<ref name=Stoljar/> Introspective reports on one's own interior mental life are not subject to careful examination for accuracy and can not be used to form predictive generalizations. Without generalizability and the possibility of third-person examination, the behaviorists argued, psychology cannot be scientific.<ref name=Stoljar/> The way out, therefore, was to eliminate or ignore the idea of an interior mental life (and hence an ontologically independent mind) altogether and focus instead on the description of observable behavior.<ref>B.F. Skinner, ''Beyond Freedom & Dignity'' (New York: Bantam/Vintage Books, 1972).</ref>
  
===Behaviorism===
+
Parallel to these developments in psychology, a philosophical behaviorism (sometimes called ''logical behaviorism'') was developed.<ref name=Stoljar/> This was characterized by a strong [[verificationism]], which generally considers unverifiable statements about interior mental life senseless. For the behaviorist, mental states are not interior states on which one can make introspective reports. They are just descriptions of behavior or dispositions to behave in certain ways, primarily made by third parties to explain and predict others' behavior.<ref>Gilbert Ryle, ''The Concept of Mind'' (Chicago University Press, 1949, ISBN 0226732959).</ref>
{{Main|Behaviorism}}
 
Behaviorism dominated philosophy of mind for much of the 20th century, especially the first half.<ref name="Kim" /> In psychology, behaviorism developed as a reaction to the inadequacies of [[introspection|introspectionism]].<ref name="Stol" /> Introspective reports on one's own interior mental life are not subject to careful examination for accuracy and can not be used to form predictive generalizations. Without generalizability and the possibility of third-person examination, the behaviorists argued, psychology cannot be scientific.<ref name="Stol" /> The way out, therefore, was to eliminate the idea of an interior mental life (and hence an ontologically independent mind) altogether and focus instead on the description of observable behavior.<ref> {{cite book | author=Skinner,B.F. | title=Beyond Freedom & Dignity | publisher=Bantam/Vintage Books |location=New York | year=1972}}</ref>
 
  
Parallel to these developments in psychology, a philosophical behaviorism (sometimes called ''logical behaviorism'') was developed.<ref name="Stol" /> This is characterized by a strong [[verificationism]], which generally considers unverifiable statements about interior mental life senseless. For the behaviorist, mental states are not interior states on which one can make introspective reports. They are just descriptions of behavior or [[disposition]]s to behave in certain ways, made by third parties to explain and predict others' behavior.<ref>{{cite book | author=Ryle, Gilbert | title=The Concept of Mind | year=1949 | publisher=Chicago University Press | location=Chicago | year=1949 |id=ISBN 0-226-73295-9 }}</ref>
+
Philosophical behaviorism, has fallen out of favor since the latter half of the 20th century, coinciding with the rise of cognitive psychology.<ref name=Kim/> Nearly all contemporary philosophers reject behaviorism, and it's not difficult to appreciate why. When I state that I'm having a headache, the behaviorist must deny that I'm referring to any sort of experience, and am merely making some claim about my dispositions. This would mean that "I have a headache" might be equivalent to saying: "I currently have a disposition to close my eyes, rub my head, and consume some pain medicine." Yet those claims are clearly ''not'' equivalent - what it is to have a headache is just to be experiencing a certain pain. If anything, it seems that the dispositions in question are the ''result'' of that experience; not constitutive of it.
  
Philosophical behaviorism, notably held by [[Wittgenstein]], has fallen out of favor since the latter half of the 20th century, coinciding with the rise of [[cognitivism]].<ref name="Kim1" /> Cognitivists reject behaviorism due to several perceived problems. For example, behaviorism could be said to be [[counter-intuitive]] when it maintains that someone is talking about behavior in the event that a person is experiencing a painful headache.
+
====Identity theory====
 +
As the difficulties with behaviorism became increasingly apparent, physicalist-minded philosophers looked for other ways to claim that the mental was nothing beyond the physical that didn't require ignoring or denying the 'internal' aspect of mentality. Many of the post-behaviorist theories can be divided in terms of a distinction made by [[Pierce|C. S. Pierce]] between 'tokens' and 'types.' Roughly speaking, 'tokens are individual instances of 'types.' A token cat, then, is a particular cat, where as the type: cat is a category including a variety of tokens. This distinction allows for some subtlety in formulating claims about the relation of the mental to the physical.
  
===Identity theory===
+
Type physicalism (or type-identity theory) was developed in large part by [[J. J. C. Smart|John Smart]]<ref name=Smart/> as a direct reaction to the failure of behaviorism. Smart and other philosophers reasoned that, if mental states are something material, but not simple behavioral dispositions, then types of mental states are probably identical to types of internal states of the brain. In very simplified terms: a mental state ''M'' is nothing other than brain state ''B.'' The mental state "desire for a cup of coffee" would thus be nothing more than the "firing of certain neurons in certain brain regions".<ref name=Smart/> On such a view, it would turn out that any two people with a desire for a cup of coffee would have a similar type of neuronal firing pattern in similar regions of the brain.
{{Main|Type physicalism}}
 
Type physicalism (or type-identity theory) was developed by [[J. J. C. Smart|John Smart]]<ref name="Smart" /> and [[Ullin Place]]<ref>{{cite journal | author=Place, Ullin | title=Is Consciousness a Brain Process? | journal=British Journal of Psychology | year=1956}}</ref> as a direct reaction to the failure of behaviorism. These philosophers reasoned that, if mental states are something material, but not behavior, then mental states are probably identical to internal states of the brain. In very simplified terms: a mental state ''M'' is nothing other than brain state ''B''. The mental state "desire for a cup of coffee" would thus be nothing more than the "firing of certain neurons in certain brain regions".<ref name="Smart" />
 
 
[[Image:Anomalous_Monism.png|thumb|right|250px|The classic Identity theory and Anomalous Monism in contrast. For the Identity theory, every token instantiation of a single mental type corresponds (as indicated by the arrows) to a physical token of a single physical type. For anomalous monism, the token-token correspondences can fall outside of the type-type correspondences. The result is token identity.]]
 
[[Image:Anomalous_Monism.png|thumb|right|250px|The classic Identity theory and Anomalous Monism in contrast. For the Identity theory, every token instantiation of a single mental type corresponds (as indicated by the arrows) to a physical token of a single physical type. For anomalous monism, the token-token correspondences can fall outside of the type-type correspondences. The result is token identity.]]
  
Despite initial plausibility, the identity theory faces at least one challenge in the form of the [[multiple realizability]] thesis , as first formulated by [[Hilary Putnam]].<ref name="Pu" /> It seems clear that not only humans, but also amphibians, for example, can experience pain. On the other hand, it seems very improbable that all of these diverse organisms with the same pain are in the same identical brain state. If this is not the case however, then pain cannot be identical to a certain brain state. The identity theory is thus empirically unfounded.<ref name="Pu" />
+
Despite initial plausibility, the identity theory faces at least one challenge in the form of the multiple realizability thesis, as first formulated by [[Hilary Putnam]].<ref name=Putnam>Hilary Putnam, ''The Threefold Cord: Mind, Body, and World'' (New York: Columbia University Press, 2000, ISBN 0231102860).</ref> It seems clear that not only humans, but also amphibians, for example, can experience pain. On the other hand, it seems very improbable that all of these diverse organisms with the same pain are in the same identical brain state. If this is not the case however, then pain (as a type) cannot be identical to a certain type of brain state. The type identity theory thus appears to be empirically unfounded. Despite these problems, there is a renewed interest in the type identity theory today, primarily due to the influence of [[Jaegwon Kim]].<ref name=Smart/>
  
But, even if this is the case, it does not follow that identity theories of all types must be abandoned. According to ''token identity'' theories, the fact that a certain brain state is connected with only one "mental" state of a person does not have to mean that there is an absolute correlation between ''types'' of mental states and ''types'' of brain state. The ''type-token distinction'' can be illustrated by a simple example: the word "green" contains four types of letters (g, r, e, n) with two tokens (occurrences) of the letter ''e'' along with one each of the others.
+
But, even if this is the case, it does not follow that identity theories of all forms must be abandoned. According to ''token identity'' theories, the fact that a certain brain state is connected with only one "mental" state of a person does not have to mean that there is an absolute correlation between ''types'' of mental states and ''types'' of brain state.  
The idea of ''token identity'' is that only particular ''occurrences'' of mental events are identical with particular ''occurrences'' or tokenings of physical events.<ref> Smart, J.J.C, "Identity Theory", ''The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy'' (Summer 2002 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.), URL=<http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2002/entries/malebranche/> </ref> Anomalous monism (see below) and most other ''non-reductive physicalisms'' are token-identity theories.<ref> {{cite book | author=Davidson, D.| title=Subjective, Intersubjective, Objective | publisher=Oxford University Press | location=Oxford | year=2001 | id=ISBN 88-7078-832-6 }}</ref> Despite these problems, there is a renewed interest in the type identity theory today, primarily due to the influence of [[Jaegwon Kim]].<ref name="Smart" />
+
The idea of ''token identity'' is that only particular ''occurrences'' of mental events are identical with particular ''occurrences'' or tokenings of physical events.<ref name=Smart>J.J.C. Smart, [https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/mind-identity/ The Mind/Brain Identity Theory], ''The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy'', May 18, 2007. Retrieved June 17, 2020.</ref> Anomalous monism (see below) and most other ''non-reductive physicalisms'' are token-identity theories.<ref>D. Davidson, ''Subjective, Intersubjective, Objective'' (Oxford University Press, 2001, ISBN 8870788326).</ref> It is worth noting that that type identity entails token identity, but not vice-versa.
  
===Functionalism===
+
====Functionalism====
{{Main|Functionalism (philosophy of mind)}}
+
Functionalism was formulated by the American philosophers Hilary Putnam and Jerry Fodor as a reaction to the inadequacies of the type identity theory. Putnam and Fodor saw mental states in terms of an empirical computational theory of the mind.<ref name=Block>Ned Block, "What is functionalism," in ''Readings in Philosophy of Psychology,'' in 2 vols. Vol 1. (Cambridge, MA: Harvard, 1980).</ref> At about the same time or slightly after, D.M. Armstrong and David Kellogg Lewis formulated a version of functionalism which analyzed the mental concepts of folk psychology in terms of functional roles.<ref>D.M. Armstrong, ''A Materialist Theory of the Mind'' (London: Routledge, 1968). </ref> Finally, [[Ludwig Wittgenstein|Wittgenstein]]'s idea of meaning as use led to a version of functionalism as a theory of meaning, further developed by Wilfrid Sellars and Gilbert Harman. Functionalists have claimed to find a precedent for their view in Aristotle's ''De Anima''.<ref>Martha C. Nussbaum and Hilary Putnam, "Changing Aristotle's mind." In Nussbaum, M.C., and Rorty, A.O. (eds.), ''Essays on Aristotle's De Anima'' (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1992), 27-56.</ref>
Functionalism was formulated by [[Hilary Putnam]] and [[Jerry Fodor]] as a reaction to the inadequacies of the identity theory.<ref name="Pu" /> Putnam and Fodor saw mental states in terms of an empirical [[computational theory of mind|computational theory of the mind]].<ref name="Block">Block, Ned. "What is functionalism" in ''Readings in Philosophy of Psychology'', 2 vols. Vol 1. (Cambridge: Harvard, 1980).</ref> At about the same time or slightly after, [[D.M. Armstrong]] and [[David Kellogg Lewis]] formulated a version of functionalism which analyzed the mental concepts of folk psychology in terms of functional roles.<ref> Armstrong, D., 1968, ''A Materialist Theory of the Mind'', Routledge. </ref> Finally, [[Ludwig Wittgenstein|Wittgenstein]]'s idea of meaning as use led to a version of functionalism as a theory of meaning, further developed by [[Wilfrid Sellars]] and [[Gilbert Harman]].
 
  
What all these different varieties of functionalism share in common is the thesis that mental states are essentially characterized by their causal relations with other mental states and with sensory inputs and behavioral outputs. That is, functionalism quantifies over, or abstracts away from, the details of the physical implementation of a mental state by characterizing it in terms of non-mental ''functional'' properties. For example, a kidney is characterized scientifically by its functional role in filtering blood and maintaining certain chemical balances. From this point of view, it does not really matter whether the kidney be made up of organic tissue, plastic nanotubes or silicon chips: it is the role that it plays and its relations to other organs that define it as a kidney.<ref name="Block" />
+
What all these different varieties of functionalism share in common is the thesis that mental states are essentially characterized by their causal relations with other mental states and with sensory inputs and behavioral outputs. That is, functionalism abstracts away from the details of the physical implementation of a mental state by characterizing it in terms of non-mental ''functional'' properties. For example, a kidney is characterized scientifically by its functional role in filtering blood and maintaining certain chemical balances. From this point of view, it does not really matter whether the kidney be made up of organic tissue, plastic nanotubes or silicon chips: it is the role that it plays and its relations to other organs that define it as a kidney.<ref name=Block/> This allows a fairly straightforward answer to the multiple realizability problem - while different organisms that experience the same mental state may differ in 'low-level' properties (such as specific arrangement of neurons, or even chemical composition), the functionalist claim merely requires that they share some more abstract property. Just as one can make a mousetrap out of any variety of materials and in any number of configurations, the functionalist view allows that a mind with mental states like ours could in principle be realized in a wide variety of ways.
  
===Nonreductive physicalism===
+
====Nonreductive physicalism====
Many philosophers hold firmly to two essential convictions with regard to mind-body relations: 1) Physicalism is true and mental states must be physical states, and 2) All reductionist proposals are unsatisfactory: mental states cannot be reduced to behavior, brain states or functional states.<ref name="Stol" /> Hence, the question arises whether there can still be a non-reductive physicalism. [[Donald Davidson (philosopher)|Donald Davidson]]'s [[anomalous monism]]<ref name="Davidson" /> is an attempt to formulate such a physicalism.
+
Many philosophers firmly hold two convictions with regard to mind-body relations: 1) Physicalism is true and mental states must be physical states, and 2) All reductionist proposals are unsatisfactory: mental states cannot be explanatorily reduced to behavior, brain states or functional states.<ref name=Stoljar/> Hence, the question arises whether there can still be a non-reductive physicalism.  
  
The idea is often formulated in terms of the thesis of [[supervenience]]: mental states supervene on physical states, but are not reducible to them. "Supervenience" therefore describes a functional dependence: there can be no change in the mental without some change in the physical.<ref>Stanton, W.L. (1983) "Supervenience and Psychological Law in Anomalous Monism", ''Pacific Philosophical Quarterly'' 64: 72-9 </ref>
+
The idea is often formulated in terms of the thesis of supervenience: mental states supervene on physical states, but are not reducible to them. This means that, as a matter of metaphysical necessity, there can be no change or variation in mental states without there being some change or variation in physical states, even while there is no way of giving an explanation or exhaustive characterization of the mental in terms of the physical.<ref>W.L. Stanton, "Supervenience and Psychological Law in Anomalous Monism," ''Pacific Philosophical Quarterly'' 64 (1983): 72-79. </ref> Such a theory fits well with the bafflement many people feel when they try to imagine how something like qualia could ever be explained in the vocabulary of physics without accepting the metaphysical baggage of dualism.
  
===Eliminative materialism===
+
====Eliminative materialism====
{{Main|Eliminative materialism}}
+
If one is a materialist but believes that all reductive efforts have failed and that a non-reductive materialism is incoherent, then one can adopt a final, more radical position: eliminative materialism. Eliminative materialists maintain that mental states are fictitious entities that are the subject matter of everyday "folk psychology."<ref name=Churchland1986/> Should folk psychology, which eliminativists view as a quasi-scientific theory, be proven wrong in the course of scientific development, then we must also abolish all of the entities postulated by it.
If one is a materialist but believes that all reductive efforts have failed and that a non-reductive materialism is incoherent, then one can adopt a final, more radical position: eliminative materialism. Eliminative materialists maintain that mental states are fictitious entities introduced by everyday "[[folk psychology]]".<ref name="Pat" /> Should "folk psychology", which eliminativists view as a quasi-scientific theory, be proven wrong in the course of scientific development, then we must also abolish all of the entities postulated by it.
 
  
Eliminativists such as [[Patricia Churchland|Patricia]] and [[Paul Churchland]] often invoke the fate of other, erroneous popular theories and [[ontology|ontologies]] which have arisen in the course of history.<ref name="Pat" /><ref name="Paul" /> For example, the belief in [[witchcraft]] as a cause of people's problems turned out to be wrong and the consequence is that most people no longer believe in the existence of witches. Witchcraft is not ''explained'' in terms of some other phenomenon, but rather ''eliminated'' from the discourse.<ref name="Paul" />
+
Eliminativists, the most notable being Patricia and Paul Churchland, often invoke the fate of other, erroneous popular theories and ontologies which have arisen in the course of history.<ref name=Churchland1986/><ref name=Churchland1981/> For example, the belief in witchcraft as a cause of people's problems turned out to be wrong and the consequence is that most people no longer believe in the existence of witches. Witchcraft is not ''explained'' in terms of some other phenomenon, but rather ''eliminated'' from the discourse. Similarly, while it might be possible to find some interpretation of the vocabulary of alchemy so that its claims would appear to be acceptable (a functionalist interpretation, for instance), this would be simply wrongheaded, for alchemy is a false science and the entities it postulated clearly do not exist.<ref name=Churchland1981/> The eliminative materialist view is, at heart, motivated by the belief that contemporary science should yield the ultimate verdict on what exists (a belief explicitly denied by Thomas Nagel).<ref name=Nagel/>
  
 
==Linguistic criticism of the mind-body problem==
 
==Linguistic criticism of the mind-body problem==
Each attempt to answer the mind-body problem encounters substantial problems. Some philosophers argue that this is because there is an underlying conceptual confusion.<ref name="Hacker">{{cite book | author=Hacker, Peter | title=Philosophical Foundations of Neuroscience | publisher=Blackwel Pub. | year=2003 | id=ISBN 1-4051-0838-X }}</ref> Such philosophers reject the mind-body problem as an illusory problem. Such a position is represented in analytic philosophy these days, for the most part, by the followers of [[Ludwig Wittgenstein]] and the Wittgensteinian tradition of linguistic criticism.<ref name="Witt">{{cite book | author=Wittgenstein, Ludwig | title=Philosophical Investigations | publisher=Macmillan | location=New York | year=1954}}</ref> The exponents of this position explain that it is an error to ask how mental and biological states fit together. Rather it should simply be accepted that humans can be described in different ways - for instance, in a mental and in a biological vocabulary. Illusory problems arise if one tries to describe the one in terms of the other's vocabulary or if the mental vocabulary is used in the wrong contexts.<ref name="Witt" /> This is the case for instance, if one searches for mental states of the brain. The brain is simply the wrong context for the use of mental vocabulary - the search for mental states of the brain is therefore a [[category error]] or a pure conceptual confusion.<ref name="Witt" />
+
Each attempt to answer the mind-body problem encounters substantial problems. Some philosophers argue that this is because there is an underlying conceptual confusion.<ref name=Hacker>Peter Hacker, ''Philosophical Foundations of Neuroscience'' (London: Blackwell, 2003, ISBN 140510838X).</ref> Such philosophers reject the mind-body problem as an illusory problem. Such a position is represented in analytic philosophy these days, for the most part, by the followers of [[Ludwig Wittgenstein]] and the Wittgensteinian tradition of linguistic criticism.<ref name=Wittgenstein>Ludwig Wittgenstein, ''Philosophical Investigations'' (New York: Macmillan, 1954).</ref> The exponents of this position explain that it is an error to ask how mental and biological states fit together. Rather it should simply be accepted that humans can be described in different ways - for instance, in a mental and in a biological vocabulary. Unnecessary problems arise if one tries to describe the one in terms of the other's vocabulary or if the mental vocabulary is used in the wrong contexts. This is the case for instance, if one searches for mental states of the brain. Talk about the brain is simply the wrong context for the use of mental vocabulary - the search for mental states of the brain is therefore a category error or a pure conceptual confusion.<ref name=Wittgenstein/>
  
Today, such a position is often adopted by interpreters of Wittgenstein such as [[Peter Hacker]].<ref name="Hacker" /> However, [[Hilary Putnam]], the inventor of functionalism, has also adopted the position that the mind-body problem is an illusory problem which should be dissolved according to the manner of Wittgenstein.<ref>{{cite book | author=Putnam, Hilary | title=The Threefold Cord: Mind, Body, and World | publisher=Columbia University Press |location=New York | year=2000 |id=ISBN 0-231-10286-0 }}</ref>
+
Today, such a position is often adopted by interpreters of Wittgenstein such as [[Peter Hacker]].<ref name=Hacker/> Significantly, Hilary Putnam, one of the original defenders of functionalism, has recently argued in favor of something like the Wittgensteinian approach.<ref name=Putnam/> Nevertheless, many contemporary philosophers of mind remain unpersuaded by this general line. This is not surprising - most of the canonical discussions of the mind-body problem were by philosophers who saw themselves as dealing with something non-linguistic (such as Descartes' 'clear and distinct ideas'), so if the issue is based in linguistic confusion, that confusion would have to be one deeply buried enough to resist easy uncovering.
  
 
==Naturalism and its problems==
 
==Naturalism and its problems==
The thesis of physicalism is that the mind is part of the material (or ''physical'') world. Such a position faces the fundamental problem that the mind has certain properties that no material thing possesses. Physicalism must therefore explain how it is possible that these properties can emerge from a material thing nevertheless. The project of providing such an explanation is often referred to as the "[[naturalism (philosophy)|naturalization]] of the mental."<ref name="Stol" /> What are the crucial problems that this project must attempt to resolve? The most well-known are probably the following two:<ref name="Stol" />
+
The thesis of physicalism is that the mind is part of the material (or ''physical'') world. In contemporary discussions, most attacks on this position are based on the fact that the mind appears to have certain properties that no material thing possesses. Physicalism must therefore explain how it is possible that these properties can exist or emerge in a world consisting entirely of the entities described by natural science (in particular: physics). The project of providing such an explanation is often referred to as the "naturalization of the mental."<ref name=Stoljar/> Naturalism about the mental is often attacked with an eye towards two features of our mental lives: the fact that much of it consists in conscious sensations or feels (called 'qualia'), and the fact that our minds involve states and events that ''represent'' or are ''about'' other things (this feature of them is called ''[[intentionality]]'').
  
 
===Qualia===
 
===Qualia===
{{Main|Qualia}}
+
Many mental states have the property of being experienced by the subject in a certain way - only I can know 'what it's like'.<ref name=Nagel/> For instance, it seems that no one is able to know how my headache feels except me, whereas everyone (if equipped with a sufficiently powerful brain-scanner) could come to know everything about the physical features of my brain that I do. Moreover, it seems to be a fundamental characteristic of natural science that the phenomena it considers can be experienced and understood by any scientific investigator (hence the expectation that all results of experiments be reproducible). This in turn leads to the requirement that all the explanations of natural science be similarly understandable. But in that case, how could science ever come to explain the 'what it's like' aspect of our mental states?
Many mental states have the property of being experienced subjectively in different ways by different individuals.<ref name="Nagel" /> For example, it is obviously characteristic of the mental state of ''pain'' that it hurts. Moreover, your sensation of pain may not be identical to mine, since we have no way of measuring how much something hurts nor of describing exactly ''how it feels to hurt''. Where does such an experience (quale) come from? Nothing indicates that a neural or functional state can be accompanied by such a pain experience. Often the point is formulated as follows: the existence of cerebral events, in and of themselves, cannot explain why they are accompanied by these corresponding qualitative experiences. Why do many cerebral processes occur with an accompanying experiential aspect in consciousness? It seems impossible to explain.<ref name="Ja" />
 
 
 
Yet it also seems to many that science will eventually have to explain such experiences.<ref name="Stol" /> This follows from the logic of reductive [[explanation]]s. If I try to explain a [[phenomenon]] reductively (e.g., [[water]]), I also have to explain why the phenomenon has all of the properties that it has (e.g., fluidity, transparency).<ref name="Stol" />In the case of mental states, this means that there needs to be an explanation of why they have the property of being experienced in a certain way.
 
  
The problem of explaining the introspective, first-person experiential aspects of mental states, and consciousness in general, in terms of third-person quantitative neuroscience is called the ''[[explanatory gap]]''.<ref>Joseph Levine, ''Materialism and Qualia: The Explanatory Gap'', in: ''Pacific Philosophical Quarterly'', vol. 64, no. 4, October, 1983, 354 - 361</ref> There are several different views of the nature of this gap among contemporary philosophers of mind. [[David Chalmers]] and the early [[Frank Jackson]] interpret the gap as [[ontology|ontological]] in nature; that is, they maintain that qualia can never be explained by science because physicalism is false. There are two separate categories involved and one cannot be reduced to the other.<ref>Jackson, F. (1986) "What Mary didn't Know", Journal of Philosophy, 83, 5, pp. 291-295.</ref> An alternative view is taken by philosophers such as [[Thomas Nagel]] and [[Colin McGinn]]. According to them, the gap is [[epistemology|epistemological]] in nature. For Nagel, science is not yet able to explain subjective experience because it has not yet arrived at the level or kind of knowledge that is required. We are not even able to formulate the problem coherently.<ref name="Nagel" /> For McGinn, on other hand, the problem is one of permanent and inherent biological limitations. We are not able to resolve the explanatory gap because the realm of subjective experiences is cognitively closed to us in the same manner that quantum physics is cognitively closed to elephants.<ref>McGinn, C. "Can the Mind-Body Problem Be Solved", ''Mind'', New Series, Volume 98, Issue 391, pp. 349-366. a[[http://art-mind.org/review/IMG/pdf/McGinn_1989_Mind-body-problem_M.pdf (online)]]</ref> Other philosophers liquidate the gap as purely a semantic problem.
+
The problem of explaining the introspective, first-person experiential aspects of mental states, and consciousness in general, in terms of third-person quantitative neuroscience is called the ''explanatory gap.''<ref>Joseph Levine, "Materialism and Qualia: The Explanatory Gap," in: ''Pacific Philosophical Quarterly'' 64 (4) (October 1983): 354-361</ref> There are several different views of the nature of this gap among contemporary philosophers of mind. David Chalmers and Frank Jackson (in his early work) interpret the gap as [[ontology|ontological]] in nature; that is, they maintain that qualia can never be explained by science because physicalism is false. There are simply two separate categories involved and one cannot be reduced to the other.<ref>F. Jackson, (1986) "What Mary didn't Know," ''Journal of Philosophy'' 83(5):  291-295.</ref> An alternative view is taken by philosophers such as Thomas Nagel and Colin McGinn. According to them, the gap is [[epistemology|epistemological]] in nature. For Nagel, science is not yet able to explain subjective experience because it has not yet arrived at the level or kind of knowledge that is required. We are not even able to formulate the problem coherently.<ref name=Nagel/> For McGinn, on other hand, the problem is one of permanent and inherent biological limitations. We are not able to resolve the explanatory gap because the realm of subjective experiences is cognitively closed to us in the same manner that quantum physics is cognitively closed to elephants.<ref>Colin McGinn, Can We Solve the Mind--Body Problem? ''Mind'' New Series, 98(391) (1989): 349-36.</ref> These epistemological views can in principle remain neutral on whether physicalism is true or not - for it seems possible that mental entities and properties be nothing more than physical entities and properties even while this is something that we can never establish (just as it seems possible that there be some entities in the universe that are undiscoverable, even though we would never be able to establish that fact).
  
 
===Intentionality===
 
===Intentionality===
[[Image:John Searle 2002.jpg|thumb|[[John Searle]] - one of the most influential philosophers of mind, proponent of [[biological naturalism]] (Berkeley 2002)]]
+
[[Image:John Searle 2002.jpg|thumb|200px|[[John Searle]] - one of the most influential philosophers of mind, proponent of [[biological naturalism]] (Berkeley 2002)]]
[[Intentionality]] is the capacity of mental states to be directed towards (''about'') or be in relation with something in the external world.<ref name="Searleint" /> This property of mental states entails that they have [[mental content|contents]] and [[semantics|semantic referents]] and can therefore be assigned truth values. When one tries to reduce these states to natural processes there arises a problem: natural processes are not true or false, they simply happen.<ref>{{cite book | author=Fodor,Jerry | title=Psychosemantics. The problem of meaning in the philosophy of mind | publisher=MIT Press | location=Cambridge | year=1993 | id=ISBN 0-262-06106-6 }}</ref> It would not make any sense to say that a natural process is true or false. But mental ideas or judgments are true or false, so how then can mental states (ideas or judgments) be natural processes? The possibility of assigning semantic value to ideas must mean that such ideas are about facts. Thus, for example, the idea that [[Herodotus]] was a historian refers to Herodotus and to the fact that he was an historian. If the fact is true, then the idea is true; otherwise, it is false. But where does this relation come from? In the brain, there are only electrochemical processes and these seem not to have anything to do with Herodotus.<ref name="Int" />
+
[[Intentionality]] is the capacity of mental states to be directed towards (be ''about'') something in the external world.<ref name=Searle/> This property of mental states is also described in terms of their having 'representational content' and '[[semantics|semantic referents]],' and this in turn in what makes it appropriate to talk of their being true or false.  
  
==Philosophy of mind and science==
+
When one tries to reduce these states to natural states or processes there arises a problem: natural processes are not true or false, they simply happen.<ref>Jerry Fodor, ''Psychosemantics: The problem of meaning in the philosophy of mind'' (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1993, ISBN 0262061066).</ref> It would appear to not make any sense to say that some state of the brain is true or false. But mental ideas or judgments are true or false, so how then can mental states (ideas or judgments) be natural processes?<ref name=Searle/> In response to such a worry, some naturalist-inclined philosophers have attempted to give an account of representation and intentionality that is fully compatible with a physicalist ontology.<ref>Fred Dretske, ''Knowledge and the Flow of Information'' (Stanford: CSLI Publications, 1999, ISBN 157586195X).</ref>
Humans are corporeal beings and, as such, they are subject to examination and description by the natural sciences. Since mental processes are not independent of bodily processes, the descriptions that the natural sciences furnish of human beings play an important role in the philosophy of mind.<ref name="Kim1" /> There are many scientific disciplines that study processes related to the mental. The list of such sciences includes: [[biology]], [[computer science]], [[cognitive science]], [[cybernetics]], [[linguistics]], [[medicine]], [[pharmacology]], [[psychology]], etc.<ref name="Pinker">Pinker, S. (1997) ''How the Mind Works''. tr. It: ''Come Funziona la Mente''. Milan:Mondadori, 2000. ISBN 88-04-49908-7 </ref>
 
  
===Neurobiology===
+
==Consequences of philosophy of mind==
The theoretical background of biology, as is the case with modern [[natural science]]s in general, is fundamentally materialistic. The objects of study are, in the first place, physical processes, which are considered to be the foundations of mental activity and behavior.<ref name="Bear">Bear, M. F. et. al. Eds. (1995). ''Neuroscience: Exploring The Brain''. Baltimore, Maryland, Williams and Wilkins. ISBN 0-7817-3944-6 </ref> The increasing success of biology in the explanation of mental phenomena can be seen by the absence of any empirical refutation of its fundamental presupposition: "there can be no change in the mental states of a person without a change in brain states."<ref name="Pinker" />
+
There are countless subjects that are affected by the ideas developed in the philosophy of mind. We know a great amount about what the nature of physical bodies, and if physicalism were true, we would be committed to ascribing certain properties of the brain to the mind.  For instance, we know that brains are divisible and destructable, so if the mind=the brain, then that would mean that the mind was divisible and destructable (in fact, Descartes' certainty that the mind ''wasn't'' divisible and destructable was one of his main reasons for rejecting positions like physicalism - see above).
  
Within the field of [[neurobiology]], there are many subdisciplines which are concerned with the relations between mental and physical states and processes:<ref name="Bear" /> [[Neurophysiology|Sensory neurophysiology]] investigates the relation between the processes of [[perception]] and [[stimulation]].<ref name="Pinel">{{cite book | author=Pinel, J.P.J | title=Psychobiology | publisher=Prentice Hall | year=1997 | id=ISBN 88-15-07174-1 }}</ref> [[Cognitive neuroscience]] studies the correlations between mental processes and neural processes.<ref name="Pinel" /> [[Neuropsychology]] describes the dependence of mental faculties on specific anatomical regions of the brain.<ref name="Pinel" /> Lastly, [[evolutionary biology]] studies the origins and development of the human nervous system and, in as much as this is the basis of the mind, also describes the [[ontogenesis|ontogenetic]] and [[phylogenesis|phylogenetic]] development of mental phenomena beginning from their most primitive stages.<ref name="Pinker" />
+
Two issues are worth emphasizing in this connection: freedom of the will and the nature of the self.
[[Image:FMRI.jpg|thumb|Since the 1980's, sophisticated [[neuroimaging]] procedures, such as [[fMRI]] (above), have furnished increasing knowledge about the workings of the human brain, shedding light on ancient philosophical problems.]]
 
 
 
The [[methodology|methodological]] breakthroughs of the neurosciences, in particular the introduction of high-tech [[neuroimaging|neuroimaging procedure]]s, has propelled scientists toward the elaboration of increasingly ambitious research programs: one of the main goals is to describe and comprehend the neural processes which correspond to mental functions (see: [[neural correlate]]).<ref name="Bear" /> A very small number of neurobiologists, such as [[Emil du Bois-Reymond]] and [[John Carew Eccles]] have denied the possibility of a "reduction" of mental phenomena to cerebral processes, partly for [[religion|religious]] reasons.<ref name="PopE" /> However, the contemporary neurobiologist and philosopher [[Gerhard Roth (biologist)|Gerhard Roth]] continues to defend a form of "non-reductive materialism."<ref>{{cite book | author=Roth, Gerhard | title=The brain and its reality. Cognitive Neurobiology and its philosophical consequences | publisher=Aufl. Suhrkamp |location=Frankfurt a.M. | year=2001 | id=ISBN 3-518-58183-X }}</ref>
 
 
 
===Computer science===
 
[[Computer science]] concerns itself with the automatic processing of [[information]] (or at least with physical systems of symbols to which information is assigned) by means of such things as [[computer]]s.<ref>{{cite book | author=Sipser, M.| title=Introduction to the Theory of Computation | location=Boston, Mass. | publisher=PWS Publishing Co. | id=ISBN 0-534-94728-X}}</ref> From the beginning, [[computer programmer]]s have been able to develop programs which permit computers to carry out tasks for which organic beings need a ''mind''. A simple example is multiplication. But it is clear that computers do not use a mind to multiply. Could they, someday, come to have what we call a mind? This question has been propelled into the forefront of much philosophical debate because of investigations in the field of [[artificial intelligence]] ("AI").
 
 
 
Within AI, it is common to distinguish between a modest research program and a more ambitious one: this distinction was coined by [[John Searle]] in terms of a [[weak AI]] and a [[strong AI]]. The exclusive objective of "weak AI", according to Searle, is the successful simulation of mental states, with no attempt to make computers become conscious or aware, etc. The objective of strong AI, on the contrary, is a computer with consciousness similar to that of human beings.<ref name="Searle">{{cite journal | author=Searle, John | title=Minds, Brains and Programs | journal=The Behavioral and Brain Sciences | Issue=3 | pages=417-424 |year=1980}}</ref>  The program of strong AI goes back to one of the pioneers of computation [[Alan Turing]]. As an answer to the question "Can computers think?", he formulated the famous [[Turing test]].<ref>{{cite journal | author=Turing, Alan | title=Computing machinery and intelligence | year=1950}}</ref>  Turing believed that a computer could be said to "think" when, if placed in a room by itself next to another room which contained a human being and with the same questions being asked of both the computer and the human being by a third party human being, the computer's responses turned out to be indistinguishable from those of the human. Essentially, Turing's view of machine intelligence followed the behaviourist model of the mind - intelligence ''is'' as intelligence does.  The Turing test has received many criticisms, among which the most famous is probably the [[Chinese room]] [[thought experiment]] formulated by Searle.<ref name="Searle" />
 
 
 
The question about the possible sensitivity ([[qualia]]) of computers or robots still remains open. Some computer scientists believe that the specialty of AI can still make new contributions to the resolution of the "mind body problem". They suggest that based on the reciprocal influences between software and hardware that takes place in all computers, it is possible that someday theories can be discovered that help us to understand the reciprocal influences between the human mind and the brain ([[wetware]]).<ref> {{cite book | author=Russell, S. and Norvig, R. | title=Artificial Intelligence:A Modern Approach | location=New Jersey | publisher=Prentice Hall, Inc. | year=1995 | id=ISBN 0-13-103805-2 }}</ref>
 
 
 
===Psychology===
 
[[Psychology]] is the science that investigates mental states directly. It uses generally empirical methods to investigate concrete mental states like [[joy]], [[fear]] or [[Obsessive-compulsive disorder|obsession]]s. Psychology investigates the laws that bind these mental states to each other or with [[input]]s and [[output]]s to the human organism.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.psychology.org | title=Encyclopedia of Psychology}}</ref>
 
 
 
An example of this is the [[Perception|psychology of perception]]. Scientists working in this field have discovered general principles of the [[perception of forms]]. A law of the psychology of forms says that objects that move in the same direction are perceived as related to each other.<ref name="Pinker" /> This law describes a relation between visual input and mental perceptual states. However, it does not suggest anything about the ''nature'' of perceptual states. The laws discovered by psychology are compatible with all the answers to the mind-body problem already described.
 
 
 
==Philosophy of mind in the continental tradition==
 
Most of the discussion in this article has focused on the predominant ''school'' (or ''style'') of philosophy in modern Western culture, usually called [[analytic philosophy]] (sometimes also inaccurately described as ''Anglo-American'' philosophy).<ref name="Dummett">{{cite book | author=Dummett, M.| title=Origini della Filosofia Analitica | publisher=Einaudi | year=2001 | id=ISBN 88-06-15286-6 }}</ref> Other schools of thought exist, however, which are sometimes (also misleadingly) subsumed under the broad label of [[continental philosophy]].<ref name="Dummett" />  In any case, the various schools that fall under this label ([[phenomenology]], [[existentialism]], etc.) tend to differ from the analytic school in that they focus less on language and logical analysis and more on directly understanding human existence and experience. With reference specifically to the discussion of the ''mind'', this tends to translate into attempts to grasp the concepts of [[thought]] and [[experience|perceptual experience]] in some direct sense that does not involve the analysis of linguistic forms.<ref name="Dummett" />
 
 
 
In [[Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel]]'s ''Phenomenology of Mind'', Hegel discusses three distinct types of mind: the ''subjective mind'', the mind of an individual; the ''objective mind'', the mind of society and of the State; and the ''Absolute mind'', a unity of all concepts. See also Hegel's ''Philosophy of Mind'' from his ''Encyclopedia''.<ref>{{cite book | author=Hegel,G.W.F | title=Phenomenology of Spirit}}, translated by A.V. Miller with analysis of the text and foreword by J. N. Findlay (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1977) ISBN 0-19-824597-1 . </ref>
 
 
 
In modern times, the two main schools that have developed in response or opposition to this Hegelian tradition are ''Phenomenology'' and ''Existentialism''. Phenomenology, founded by [[Edmund Husserl]], focuses on the contents of the human mind (see [[noema]]) and how phenomenological processes shape our experiences.<ref>{{cite book | author=Husserl,Edmund | title=Logische Untersuchungen}} trans.: Giovanni Piana. Milan: EST. ISBN 88-428-0949-7 </ref> [[Existentialism]], a school of thought founded upon the work of [[Søren Kierkegaard]] and [[Friedrich Nietzsche]], focuses on the content of experiences and how the mind deals with such experiences.<ref>Flynn, Thomas, [http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2004/entries/sartre/ "Jean-Paul Sartre"], ''The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy'' (Summer 2004 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.)</ref>
 
 
 
An important, though not very well known, example of a philosopher of mind and cognitive scientist who tries to synthesize ideas from both traditions is [[Ron McClamrock]]. Borrowing from [[Herbert Simon]] and also influenced by the ideas of [[existential phenomenology|existential phenomenologists]] such as [[Maurice Merleau-Ponty]] and [[Martin Heidegger]], McClamrock suggests that man's condition of being-in-the-world ("Dasein", "In-der-welt-sein") makes it impossible for him to understand himself by abstracting away from it and examining it as if it were a detached experimental object of which he himself is not an integral part.<ref>{{cite book | author=McClamrock, Ron | title=Existential Cognition: Computational Minds in the World | location=Chicago | publisher=University of Chicago Press | year=1995}}</ref>
 
 
 
==Consequences of philosophy of mind==
 
There are countless subjects that are affected by the ideas developed in the philosophy of mind. Clear examples of this are the nature of [[death]] and its definitive character, the nature of [[emotion]], of [[perception]] and of [[memory]]. Questions about what a [[person]] is and what his or her [[Personal identity|identity]] consists of also have much to do with the philosophy of mind. There are two subjects that, in connection with the philosophy of the mind, have aroused special attention: [[free will]] and the [[self]].<ref name="Kim1" />
 
  
 
===Free will===
 
===Free will===
{{Main| Free will}}
+
In the context of the philosophy of mind, the question about the freedom of the will takes on a renewed intensity. This is certainly the case, at least, for materialistic [[determinism|determinists]].<ref name=Kim/> According to this position, natural laws completely determine the course of the material world. Mental states, and therefore the ''will'' as well, would be material entities, and so completely determined by natural laws. Some philosophers take this argumentation a step further: not only, if materialism is correct, are people unable to do otherwise than what they do, but people cannot determine by themselves what they want and what they do - what happens is out of their control. Consequently, they are not free.<ref name=Honderich>Ted Honderich [http://www.ucl.ac.uk/~uctytho/dfwIntroIndex.htm Philosopher Ted Honderich's Determinism web resource], ''Freedom & Determinism Philosophy.'' Retrieved June 17, 2020.</ref>
In the context of the philosophy of mind, the question about the freedom of the will takes on a renewed intensity. This is certainly the case, at least, for materialistic [[determinism|determinists]].<ref name="Kim1" /> According to this position, natural laws completely determine the course of the material world. Mental states, and therefore the ''will'' as well, would be material states which means human behavior and decisions would be completely determined by natural laws. Some take this argumentation a step further: people cannot determine by themselves what they want and what they do. Consequently, they are not free.<ref name="Hond">{{cite web | url=http://www.ucl.ac.uk/~uctytho/dfwIntroIndex.htm |title=Philosopher Ted Honderich's Determinism web resource}}</ref>
 
 
 
[[Image:Immanuel_Kant.jpg|thumb|[[Immanuel Kant]] rejected compatibilism]]
 
  
This argumentation is rejected, on the one hand, by the [[compatibilism|compatibilists]]. Those who adopt this position suggest that the question "Are we free?" can only be answered once we have determined what the term "free" means. The opposite of "free" is not "caused" but "compelled" or "coerced". It is not appropriate to identify freedom with indetermination. A free act is one where the agent ''could'' have done otherwise ''if'' it had chosen otherwise. In this sense a person can be free even though determinism is true.<ref name="Hond" />  The most important compatibilist in the history of the philosophy was [[David Hume]].<ref>Russell, Paul, ''Freedom and Moral Sentiment: Hume's Way of Naturalizing Responsibility'' Oxford University Press: New York & Oxford, 1995. </ref>Nowadays, this position is defended, for example, by [[Daniel Dennett]],<ref>{{cite book| author=Dennett, Daniel | title=The Varieties of Free Will Worth Wanting | publisher=Bradford Books-MIT Press |location=Cambridge MA | year=1984 |id=ISBN 0-262-54042-8 }}</ref> and, from a dual-aspect perspective, by [[Max Velmans]].<ref>{{cite book| author=Velmans, Max | title=How could conscious experiences affect brains? | publisher=Imprint Academic | location=Exeter | year=2003 |id=ISBN 0907845-39-8 }}</ref>
+
[[Image:Immanuel_Kant.jpg|thumb|200px|[[Immanuel Kant]] rejected compatibilism]]
  
 +
Such a view is rejected by by advocates of [[compatibilism]]. Those who adopt this position suggest that the question "Are we free?" can only be answered once we have determined what the term "free" means. The opposite of "free," one might argue, is not "caused" but "compelled" or "coerced." It is not appropriate to identify freedom with indetermination or the ability to simply have done otherwise. A free act is one where the agent could have done otherwise ''if he or she had chosen otherwise.'' But this view allows that the decisions themselves can be causally determined. In this sense a person can be free even though determinism is true.<ref name=Honderich/> Perhaps the most important compatibilist in the history of the philosophy was [[David Hume]],<ref>Paul Russell. ''Freedom and Moral Sentiment: Hume's Way of Naturalizing Responsibility.'' (New York & Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995.)</ref> though similar positions are found at least as far back as the [[Stoicism|Stoics]]. Nowadays, this position is defended, for example, by Daniel Dennett,<ref>Daniel Dennett, ''The Varieties of Free Will Worth Wanting'' (Cambridge, MA: Bradford Books-MIT Press, 1984, ISBN 0262540428).</ref> and, from a dual-aspect perspective, by Max Velmans.<ref>Max Velmans, ''How could conscious experiences affect brains?'' (Exeter: Imprint Academic, 2003, ISBN 0907845398).</ref>
  
On the other hand, there are also many [[incompatibilism|incompatibilists]] who reject the argument because they believe that the will is free in a stronger sense called [[Libertarianism (metaphysics)|originationism]].<ref name="Hond" /> These philosophers affirm that the course of the world is not completely determined by natural laws: the will at least does not have to be and, therefore, it is potentially free. The most prominent incompatibilist in the history of philosophy was [[Immanuel Kant]].<ref>{{cite book| author=Kant, Immanuel | title=Critique of Pure Reason | year=1781}} translation: F. Max Muller, Dolphin Books, Doubleday & Co. Garden City, New York. 1961.</ref> Critics of this position accuse the incompatibilists of using an incoherent concept of freedom. They argue as follows: if our will is not determined by anything, then we desire what we desire by pure chance. And if what we desire is purely accidental, we are not free. So if our will is not determined by anything, we are not free.<ref name="Hond" />
+
On the other hand, there are also many [[incompatibilism|incompatibilists]] who reject the argument because they believe that the will is free in a stronger sense called 'libertarianisml.<ref name=Honderich/> These philosophers affirm that the course of the world is not completely determined by natural laws: the will at least does not have to be and, therefore, it is potentially free. Perhaps the most prominent incompatibilist in the history of philosophy was [[Immanuel Kant]].<ref>Immanuel Kant, ''Critique of Pure Reason'' translated by F. Max Muller, (Garden City, NY: Dolphin Books, Doubleday & Co., 1961).</ref> A contemporary advocate of the view is Peter van Inwagen.<ref>Peter van Inwagen, ''An Essay on Free Will'' (Oxford University Press, 1983).</ref> Yet incompatibilism takes on quite different forms depending on the background philosophy of mind - for a physicalist, this requires that one reject the view that physical laws are deterministic. Kant, however, used the intuitions motivating libertarianism to motivate his view that the will is itself not properly part of the physical world.
  
 
===The self===
 
===The self===
The philosophy of mind also has important consequences for the concept of [[self]]. If by "self" or "I" one refers to an essential, immutable nucleus of the ''person'', most modern philosophers of mind will affirm that no such thing exists.<ref name="DHof">{{cite book | author=Dennett, C. and Hofstadter, D.R. | title=The Mind's I | publisher=Bantam Books | year=1981 |id=ISBN 0-553-01412-9}}</ref> The idea of a self as an immutable essential nucleus derives from the Christian idea of an [[soul|immaterial soul]]. Such an idea is unacceptable to most contemporary philosophers, due to their physicalistic orientations, and due to a general acceptance among philosophers of the scepticism of the concept of 'self' by [[David Hume]], who could never catch ''himself'' doing, thinking or feeling anything.<ref>{{cite book | author=Searle, John | title=Mind: A Brief Introduction | publisher=Oxford University Press Inc, USA  | year=Jan 2005|id=ISBN 0-19-515733-8 }}</ref>  However, in the light of empirical results from [[developmental psychology]], [[developmental biology]] and the [[neuroscience]]s, the idea of an essential ''inconstant'', ''material'' nucleus - an integrated representational system distributed over changing patterns of synaptic connections - seems reasonable.<ref>{{cite book | author=LeDoux,Joseph | title=The Synaptic Self | location=New York | publisher=Viking Penguin | year=2002 | id=ISBN 88-7078-795-8 }}</ref>
+
The philosophy of mind also has important consequences for the concept of [[self]]. If by "self" or "I" one refers to an essential, immutable nucleus of the ''person'', most modern philosophers of mind (accepting physicalism) will affirm that no such thing exists.<ref name=Dennett>Daniel C. Dennett and D.R. Hofstadter, ''The Mind's I'' (Bantam Books, 1981, ISBN 0553014129).</ref> The idea of a self has historically been tied to the idea of an [[soul|immaterial soul]] (Descartes, for instance, identified the two). In addition to skepticism arising from physicalism, many philosophers also follow [[David Hume]] in questioning what introspective basis we even have for believing that such an entity exists.<ref>John Serle, ''Mind: A Brief Introduction.'' (Oxford University Press Inc, 2005, ISBN 0195157338).</ref>   
  
In view of this problem, some philosophers affirm that we should abandon the idea of a self.<ref name="DHof" /> For example, [[Thomas Metzinger]] and [[Susan Blackmore]] both practice meditation, claiming that this gives us reliable conscious experience of selflessness.<ref>{{cite book | author=Blackmore, Susan | title=Conversations on Consciousness: Interviews with Twenty Minds  | publisher= Oxford University Press  | year=Nov 2005|id=ISBN 0-19-280622-X }}</ref> Philosophers and scientists holding this view frequently talk of the self, "I", agency and related concepts as 'illusory', a view with parallels in some Eastern religious traditions, such as [[anatta]] in [[Buddhism]].<ref>{{cite book
+
In view of this problem, some philosophers affirm that we should abandon the idea of a self. Another view is that we should redefine the concept: by "self" we would not be referring to some immutable and essential nucleus, but to something that is in permanent change. A contemporary defender of this position is Daniel Dennett.<ref name=Dennett/>
| last = Lopez Jr.
 
| first = Donald S.
 
| title = Buddhism in Practice
 
| year = 1995
 
| publisher = Princeton University Press
 
| location = Princeton
 
| id = ISBN 0-691-04441-4
 
}}</ref> But this is a minority position. More common is the view that we should redefine the concept: by "self" we would not be referring to some immutable and essential nucleus, but to something that is in permanent change. A contemporary defender of this position is [[Daniel Dennett]].<ref name="DHof" />
 
  
==See also==
+
==Notes==
*For more information and links about topics discussed in the article, see: [[Portal:Mind and Brain]]
 
*For more information about scientific research related to topics discussed in the article, see: [[Cognitive science]]
 
 
 
==Notes and references==
 
<div class="references-small" style="column-count:2;-moz-column-count:2;">
 
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
</div>
 
  
==Further reading==
+
==References==
*{{cite book
+
*Armstrong, D.M. ''A Materialist Theory of the Mind,'' second ed. London: Routledge, 1993. ISBN 0415100313
| last = Rousseau
+
*Block, Ned. "What is functionalism," in ''Readings in Philosophy of Psychology,'' in 2 vols. Vol 1. Cambridge, MA: Harvard, 1980.
| first =  George S.
+
*Capitan, W.H., and D.D. Merrill (eds.). ''Art, Mind and Religion.'' Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. 1967.
| title = Nervous Acts: Essays on Literature, Culture and Sensibility
+
*Chalmers, David. ''The Conscious Mind.'' Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 1997. ISBN 0195117891
  | year = 2004
+
*Chalmers, David (ed.). ''Philosophy of Mind: Classical and Contemporary Readings.'' Oxford University Press, 2002.
| publisher = Palgrave Macmillan
+
*Churchland, Patricia. ''Neurophilosophy: Toward a Unified Science of the Mind-Brain.'' Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1986. ISBN 0262031167
| location = Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire (NY)
+
*Churchland, Paul, "Eliminative Materialism and the Propositional Attitudes," ''Journal of Philosophy'' (1981).
| id = ISBN 1-4039-3454-1
+
*Davidson, Donald. ''Essays on Actions and Events.'' Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 1980. ISBN 0199246270
}}
+
*Dennett, Daniel. ''The Varieties of Free Will Worth Wanting.'' Cambridge, MA: Bradford Books-MIT Press,  1984. ISBN 0262540428.
*{{cite book
+
*Dennett, Daniel C., and D.R. Hofstadter. ''The Mind's I.'' Bantam Books, 1981. ISBN 0553014129.
| last = Sternberg
+
*Descartes, René. ''Discourse on Method and Meditations on First Philosophy.'' Hacket Publishing Company. ISBN 0872204219
| first =  Eliezer J.
+
*Dretske, Fred. ''Knowledge and the Flow of Information.'' Stanford: CSLI Publications, 1999. ISBN 157586195X.
| title = Are You a Machine?: The Brain, the Mind, And What It Means to Be Human
+
*Fodor, Jerry. ''Psychosemantics. The problem of meaning in the philosophy of mind.'' Cambridge: MIT Press, 1993. ISBN 0262061066.
| year = 2007
+
*Hacker, Peter. ''Philosophical Foundations of Neuroscience.'' Blackwel Pub., 2003. ISBN 140510838X.
| publisher = Humanity Books
+
*Hart, W.D. "Dualism," in Samuel Guttenplan (org) ''A Companion to the Philosophy of Mind.'' London: Blackwell, Oxford University Press, 1996.
| id = ISBN 1-59102-483-8
+
*Hodgson, Shadworth Hollway. ''Time and Space: a Metaphysical Essay''. HardPress Publishing, 2019. ISBN 978-0461030402
}}
+
*Inwagen, Peter van. ''An Essay on Free Will.'' Oxford University Press, 1983.
 +
*Jackson, F. "What Mary didn't Know," ''Journal of Philosophy'' 83 (5) (1986): 291-295.
 +
*Kant, Immanuel. ''Critique of Pure Reason,'' translated by F. Max Muller. Garden City, NY:Dolphin Books, Doubleday & Co., 1781.
 +
*Kim, Jaegwon. "Mind-Body Problem," ''Oxford Companion to Philosophy,'' edited by Ted Honderich. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 199).
 +
*Levine, Joseph. "Materialism and Qualia: The Explanatory Gap," in ''Pacific Philosophical Quarterly'' 64(4) (October, 1983): 354–361.
 +
*McGinn, C. "Can the Mind-Body Problem Be Solved," ''Mind'' New Series, 98 (391): 349-366.
 +
*Nussbaum. Martha C., and H. Putnam. "Changing Aristotle's mind." In Nussbaum, M.C. and Rorty, A.O. (eds.), ''Essays on Aristotle's De Anima.'' Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1992, 27-56.
 +
*Popper, Karl, and John Eccles. ''The Self and Its Brain.'' Springer Verlag, 2002. ISBN 3492210961
 +
*Putnam, Hilary. ''The Threefold Cord: Mind, Body, and World.'' New York: Columbia University Press, 2000. ISBN 0231102860.  
 +
*Russell, Paul. ''Freedom and Moral Sentiment: Hume's Way of Naturalizing Responsibility.'' Oxford University Press, 1995.
 +
*Ryle, Gilbert. ''The Concept of Mind.'' Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1949. ISBN 0226732959.
 +
*Searle, John. ''Intentionality. A Paper on the Philosophy of Mind.'' Frankfurt a. M.: Nachdr. Suhrkamp., 2001. ISBN 3518285564
 +
*Searle, John. ''Mind: A Brief Introduction.'' Oxford University Press Inc, USA. 2005. ISBN 0195157338
 +
*Skinner, B.F. ''Beyond Freedom & Dignity.'' New York: Bantam/Vintage Books, 1972.
 +
*Stanton, W.L. "Supervenience and Psychological Law in Anomalous Monism," in ''Pacific Philosophical Quarterly'' 64 (1983): 72-9
 +
*Unger, Peter. ''All the Power in the World.'' Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2006.
 +
*Velmans, Max. ''How could conscious experiences affect brains?.'' Exeter: Imprint Academic, 2003. ISBN 0907845398.
 +
*Wittgenstein, Ludwig. ''Philosophical Investigations.'' New York: Macmillan, 1954.
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
* [http://consc.net/guide.html Guide to Philosophy of Mind], compiled by David Chalmers.
+
All links retrieved November 23, 2022.
 +
 
 +
* [http://consc.net/guide.html Guide to the Philosophy of Mind], compiled by David Chalmers.
 
* [http://consc.net/biblio.html Contemporary Philosophy of Mind: An Annotated Bibliography], compiled by David Chalmers.
 
* [http://consc.net/biblio.html Contemporary Philosophy of Mind: An Annotated Bibliography], compiled by David Chalmers.
* [http://philosophy.uwaterloo.ca/MindDict/ Dictionary of Philosophy of Mind], edited by Chris Eliasmith.
+
* [https://philpapers.org/browse/philosophy-of-mind Philosophy of Mind] Edited by David Chalmers and David Bourget.
* [http://www.galilean-library.org/int14.html An Introduction to the Philosophy of Mind], by Paul Newall, aimed at beginners.
 
* [http://consc.net/online.html A list of online papers on consciousness and philosophy of mind], compiled by David Chalmers
 
{{featured article}}
 
* [http://host.uniroma3.it/progetti/kant/field/ Field guide to the Philosophy of Mind]
 
 
 
[[Category:Philosophy of mind|Philosophy of mind]]
 
[[Category:Cognitive science]]
 
 
 
{{Link FA|de}}
 
  
[[ar:فلسفة العقل]]
 
[[de:Philosophie des Geistes]]
 
[[et:Vaimufilosoofia]]
 
[[es:Filosofía de la mente]]
 
[[fa:فلسفه ذهن]]
 
[[fr:Philosophie de l'esprit]]
 
[[is:Hugspeki]]
 
[[it:Filosofia della mente]]
 
[[he:הבעיה הפסיכופיזית]]
 
[[nl:filosofie van geest en cognitie]]
 
[[ja:心身問題の哲学]]
 
[[pl:Filozofia umysłu]]
 
[[pt:Filosofia da mente]]
 
[[ro:Filozofia minţii]]
 
[[ru:Философия сознания]]
 
[[sr:Филозофија ума]]
 
[[fi:Mielenfilosofia]]
 
[[zh:精神哲学]]
 
  
 +
===General Philosophy Sources===
  
 +
*[http://plato.stanford.edu/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy].
 +
*[http://www.iep.utm.edu/ The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy].
 +
*[http://www.bu.edu/wcp/PaidArch.html Paideia Project Online].
 +
*[http://www.gutenberg.org/ Project Gutenberg].
 +
 +
[[category:Philosophy and religion]]
 +
[[Category:philosophy]]
  
 
{{credit|109275308}}
 
{{credit|109275308}}

Latest revision as of 22:42, 28 March 2023

A Phrenological mapping of the brain. Phrenology was among the first attempts to correlate mental functions with specific parts of the brain.

Philosophy of mind is the branch of philosophy that studies the nature of the mind, mental events, mental functions, mental properties and consciousness, and their relationship to the physical body. The mind-body problem, namely, the question of how the mind relates to the body, is commonly seen as the central issue in philosophy of mind, although there are other issues concerning the nature of the mind that do not involve its relation to the physical body.

Overview

Dualism and monism are the two major schools of thought that attempt to resolve the mind-body problem. Dualism is the position that mind and body are in some way separate from each other. It can be traced back at least to Plato,[1] Aristotle[2] [3][4] and the Sankhya and Yoga schools of Hindu philosophy, but received its most influential formulation by René Descartes in the seventeenth century.[5] Substance dualists argue that the mind is an independently existing substance, whereas Property dualists maintain that the mind is a group of independent properties that emerge from and cannot be reduced to the brain, though they are ontologically dependent on it.[6]

Monism rejects the dualist separation and maintains that mind and body are, at the most fundamental level, of the same kind. This view seems to have first been advocated in Western Philosophy by Parmenides in the fifth century B.C.E. and was later espoused by the seventeenth century rationalist Baruch Spinoza.[7] Rough parallels in Eastern Philosophy might be the Hindu concept of Brahman or the Dao of Lao Tzu. Physicalists argue that only the entities postulated by physical theory exist, and that mind is ultimately nothing more than such physical entities. Idealists maintain that minds (along with their perceptions and ideas) are all that exists and that the external world is either mental itself, or an illusion created by the mind. The most common monisms in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries have all been variations of physicalism; these positions include behaviorism, the type identity theory, and anomalous monism.[8]

Many modern philosophers of mind adopt either a reductive or non-reductive physicalist position, maintaining in their different ways that only the mind is not something separate from the brain.[8] Reductivists assert that all mental states and properties can in principle be explained by neuroscientific accounts of brain processes and states.[9][10][11] Non-reductionists argue that although the brain is all there is to the mind, mental states and properties cannot ultimately be explained in the terms of the physical sciences (such a view is often expressed by focusing on predicates of a mental sort, such as 'is seeing red').[12][13] Continued neuroscientific progress has helped to clarify some of these issues. However, they are far from having been resolved, and modern philosophers of mind continue to ask how the subjective qualities and the intentionality (aboutness) of mental states and properties can be explained in the terms of the natural sciences.[14][15]

The mind-body problem

Did you know?
The most important issue in the philosophy of mind is the "mind-body" problem, or the relationship between the mind and the body

The mind-body problem concerns the explanation of the relationship, if any, that obtains between minds, or mental processes, and bodily states or processes. One way to get an intuitive grip on the problem is to consider the following line of thought:

Each of us spends much of our day dealing with ordinary physical objects, like tables, chairs, cars, computers, food, etc. Though some of these objects are much more complex than others, they seem to have a great deal in common. This commonality is brought out by our belief that every feature of these objects can be explained by physics. Each object is clearly just a bunch of particles arranged in a certain way, so that (with sufficient energy) each could—in principle—be turned into another. In other words, they all seem to be made out of the same sort of stuff, and their properties are just a function of how that stuff is arranged. Intuitively, our bodies are no exceptions to this. While they are much more complex than any machine we can currently make, we believe our bodies are made up of the same stuff as our simplest machines (e.g., protons, neutrons and electrons).

At the same time, we also believe that there are mental things in the universe. If you and a friend are looking at a statue from different sides, you might ask your friend what her experience of the statue was like. You might then compare your experiences - while the color of the statue might have been more prominent in your experience, the shape might have been more prominent in hers. This just shows that we think that there's a certain kind of thing, an 'experience' that makes up part of the world, and we attribute these experiences to minds.

Now we ask: are these minds and their experiences a sort of physical object? Not obviously. Experiences don't seem to be made up of particles. They certainly seem to have some important relation to a certain set of particles (those that make up our brains and bodies), but if (for instance) we were to divide a brain in half, we wouldn't think that experiences would somehow split in half. Moreover, while it's clear that experiences can be about objects, it's not at all clear how some bunch of particles could be 'about' anything at all.

To put the point slightly differently, imagine that someone were describing a possible universe to you, and gave you a very long list of particle locations. No matter how detailed that list, it would seem that there's a very reasonable question you could ask: are there any minds in this universe? A certain arrangement of particles is clearly sufficient for a book to exist, but the same isn't obviously true for minds and experiences.

There are both metaphysical and epistemological aspects to this problem. On the metaphysical side, we might wonder about whether minds and bodies are distinct substances, whether they could exist independently of each other, and whether they have different properties. On the epistemological side, we might wonder whether neuroscience will ever be able to fully explain the nature of minds and experiences.

Dualist solutions to the mind-body problem

Dualism is a family of views about the relationship between mind and physical matter. It begins with the claim that mental phenomena are, in some respects, non-physical. One of the earliest known formulations of mind-body dualism was expressed in the eastern Sankhya and Yoga schools of Hindu philosophy (c. 650 B.C.E.), which divided the world into purusha (mind/spirit) and prakrti (material substance).

In Western Philosophy, some of the earliest discussions of dualist ideas are in the writings of Plato and Aristotle. Each of these maintained, but for different reasons, that man's "intelligence" (a faculty of the mind or soul) could not be identified with, or explained in terms of, his physical body.[1] However, the best-known version of dualism is due to René Descartes (expressed in his 1641 Meditations on First Philosophy), and holds that the mind is a non-extended, non-physical substance.[5] Descartes was the first to clearly identify the mind with consciousness and self-awareness, and to distinguish this from the brain, which was the seat of intelligence.

Arguments for dualism

Two of the most famous arguments for dualism were given their classic formulations by Descartes. The first is often referred to as the Conceivability Argument. In broad outline, it runs as follows: though they presently exist together somehow, I am capable of forming a clear and distinct conception of my mind existing without my body, and an equally clear and distinct conception of my body existing without my mind. Unlike some other forms of imagining, clear and distinct perception is of an especially reliable sort (Descartes believed that that premise required an argument that God had given us our faculties and was not a deceiver), so we can conclude that the mind and body are indeed independent. The contemporary philosopher David Chalmers has recently provided detailed discussion and defense of this sort of argument.[16]

Descartes' second argument is often referred to as the Divisibility Argument. That outline proceeds roughly as follows: my body/brain and all its parts are divisible, yet my mind is utterly simple and indivisible, so my mind cannot be identical to my body/brain or any part thereof. This argument rests heavily on the notion of 'divisibility,' and there is some challenge in finding an understanding of it that doesn't make the argument question-begging. A recent defense of a more sophisticated form of the Divisibility Argument can be found in Peter Unger's All the Power in the World.[17]

A popular contemporary line of argument in favor of dualism centers on the idea that the mental and the physical seem to have quite different, and perhaps irreconcilable, properties.[18] Mental events have a certain subjective quality to them, whereas physical events do not. So, for example, one can reasonably ask what a burnt finger feels like to a person, or what a blue sky looks like to a mind, or what nice music sounds like to the person hearing it. But it is meaningless, or at least odd, to ask what a surge in the uptake of glutamate in the dorsolateral portion of the hippocampus feels like.

Philosophers of mind call the subjective aspects of mental events qualia (or raw feels).[18] There is something 'that it is like' to feel pain, to see a familiar shade of blue, and so on. There are qualia involved in these mental events that seem particularly difficult to reduce to or explain in terms of anything physical.[19]

Interactionist dualism

Portrait of René Descartes by Frans Hals (1648)

Interactionist dualism, or simply interactionism, is the particular form of dualism first espoused by Descartes in the Meditations.[5] In the twentieth century, two of its major defenders have been Karl Popper and John Carew Eccles.[20]

This view makes a natural step beyond the basic claim that the mind and body are two distinct substances, and adds that they causally influence each other. One simple but clear case would be the following: something bites my arm; a signal is sent to my brain and then to my mind. My mind then makes the decision to brush the biting thing away, sending a message to my brain, which then sends a message to the arms to do the brushing.

The most difficult part of this story, to make sense of it, concerns the communication between the (physical) brain and the (non-physical) mind. Descartes believed that the pineal gland in the center of the brain was the spot of communication, but could offer no further explanation. After all, while we have some grasp on the laws that govern communication of motion between physical bodies, and the psychological laws that describe how certain thoughts lead to other thoughts; no known set of laws seems fit, to describe the way in which the physical and the mental (when conceived as non-physical) interact. Indeed, the sort of interaction in question seems to be inconceivable (an especially sensitive point for dualists who base their position on the Conceivability Argument).

Other forms of dualism

1) Psycho-physical parallelism, or simply parallelism, is the view that mind and body, while having distinct ontological statuses, do not causally influence one another. Instead, they run along parallel paths (mind events causally interact with mind events and brain events causally interact with brain events) and only seem to influence each other. This view was most prominently defended by Gottfried Leibniz. Although Leibniz was an ontological monist who believed that only one fundamental substance, monads, exists in the universe and that everything (including physical matter) is reducible to it, he nonetheless maintained that there was an important distinction between "the mental" and "the physical" in terms of causation. He held that God had arranged things in advance so that minds and bodies would be in harmony with each other. This is known as the doctrine of pre-established harmony.[21]

Portrait of Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz by Bernhard Christoph Francke (circa 1700)

2) Occasionalism is the view espoused most notably by Nicholas Malebranche which asserts that all supposedly causal relations between physical events, or between physical and mental events, are not really causal at all. While body and mind are still different substances, causes (whether mental or physical) are related to their effects by an act of God's intervention on each specific occasion. For instance, my decision to raise my arm is merely the occasion on which God causes my arm to raise. Likewise, the motion of particles which constitute my finger's being pricked is the occasion on which God causes a sensation of pain to appear in my brain.

3) Epiphenomenalism is a doctrine first formulated by Shadworth Hodgson,[22] but with precedents going back as far as Plato. Fundamentally, it consists in the view that mental phenomena are causally ineffectual. Physical events can cause other physical events and physical events can cause mental events, but mental events cannot cause anything, since they are just causally inert by-products (i.e., epiphenomena) of the physical world. The view has been defended most strongly in recent times by Frank Jackson.[23]

4) Property dualism asserts that when matter is organized in the appropriate way (i.e. in the way that living human bodies are organized), mental properties emerge. Hence, it is a sub-branch of emergent materialism. These emergent properties have an independent ontological status and cannot be reduced to, or explained in terms of, the physical substrate from which they emerge. This position is espoused by David Chalmers and has undergone something of a renaissance in recent years.[16] Unlike more traditional dualism, this view doesn't involve the claim that the mind is capable of existing independently of physical objects.

Monist solutions to the mind-body problem

In contrast to dualism, monism states that there is only one fundamental substance or type of substance. Today, the most common forms of monism in Western philosophy are physicalist.[8] Physicalistic monism asserts that the only existing substance is physical, in some sense of that term to be clarified by our best science.[24] Physicalism has been formulated in a wide variety of ways (see below).

Another form of monism, idealism, states that the only existing substance is mental. The most prominent defenders of that view in the Western tradition are Leibniz and the Irish Bishop George Berkeley.

Another possibility is to accept the existence of a basic substance which is neither exclusively physical nor exclusively mental. One version of such a position was adopted by the Dutch Jewish philosopher Baruch Spinoza,[7] who held that God was the only substance in the world, and that all particular things (including minds and bodies) were merely affections of God. A rather different version was popularized by Ernst Mach[25] in the nineteenth century. This neutral monism, as it is called, bears some resemblance to property dualism.

Varieties of Physicalism

Prior to the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, physics had accomplished relatively little, and theology set many of the starting points for science, making it easier for thinkers to assume that there was more to the universe than described in the language of physics. Today, the claim that physics is the most fundamental science, and that the truths of other sciences can—in principle—be reduced to the truths of physics, is seen by many as almost self-evident. Because of this, many philosophers have seen physicalism monism as irresistible, so that more intellectual energy has been devoted to developing varieties of this view of the mind than any other.

Behaviorism

Behaviorism dominated philosophy of mind for much of the twentieth century, especially the first half.[8] In psychology, behaviorism developed as a reaction to the inadequacies of introspectionism.[24] Introspective reports on one's own interior mental life are not subject to careful examination for accuracy and can not be used to form predictive generalizations. Without generalizability and the possibility of third-person examination, the behaviorists argued, psychology cannot be scientific.[24] The way out, therefore, was to eliminate or ignore the idea of an interior mental life (and hence an ontologically independent mind) altogether and focus instead on the description of observable behavior.[26]

Parallel to these developments in psychology, a philosophical behaviorism (sometimes called logical behaviorism) was developed.[24] This was characterized by a strong verificationism, which generally considers unverifiable statements about interior mental life senseless. For the behaviorist, mental states are not interior states on which one can make introspective reports. They are just descriptions of behavior or dispositions to behave in certain ways, primarily made by third parties to explain and predict others' behavior.[27]

Philosophical behaviorism, has fallen out of favor since the latter half of the 20th century, coinciding with the rise of cognitive psychology.[8] Nearly all contemporary philosophers reject behaviorism, and it's not difficult to appreciate why. When I state that I'm having a headache, the behaviorist must deny that I'm referring to any sort of experience, and am merely making some claim about my dispositions. This would mean that "I have a headache" might be equivalent to saying: "I currently have a disposition to close my eyes, rub my head, and consume some pain medicine." Yet those claims are clearly not equivalent - what it is to have a headache is just to be experiencing a certain pain. If anything, it seems that the dispositions in question are the result of that experience; not constitutive of it.

Identity theory

As the difficulties with behaviorism became increasingly apparent, physicalist-minded philosophers looked for other ways to claim that the mental was nothing beyond the physical that didn't require ignoring or denying the 'internal' aspect of mentality. Many of the post-behaviorist theories can be divided in terms of a distinction made by C. S. Pierce between 'tokens' and 'types.' Roughly speaking, 'tokens are individual instances of 'types.' A token cat, then, is a particular cat, where as the type: cat is a category including a variety of tokens. This distinction allows for some subtlety in formulating claims about the relation of the mental to the physical.

Type physicalism (or type-identity theory) was developed in large part by John Smart[28] as a direct reaction to the failure of behaviorism. Smart and other philosophers reasoned that, if mental states are something material, but not simple behavioral dispositions, then types of mental states are probably identical to types of internal states of the brain. In very simplified terms: a mental state M is nothing other than brain state B. The mental state "desire for a cup of coffee" would thus be nothing more than the "firing of certain neurons in certain brain regions".[28] On such a view, it would turn out that any two people with a desire for a cup of coffee would have a similar type of neuronal firing pattern in similar regions of the brain.

The classic Identity theory and Anomalous Monism in contrast. For the Identity theory, every token instantiation of a single mental type corresponds (as indicated by the arrows) to a physical token of a single physical type. For anomalous monism, the token-token correspondences can fall outside of the type-type correspondences. The result is token identity.

Despite initial plausibility, the identity theory faces at least one challenge in the form of the multiple realizability thesis, as first formulated by Hilary Putnam.[29] It seems clear that not only humans, but also amphibians, for example, can experience pain. On the other hand, it seems very improbable that all of these diverse organisms with the same pain are in the same identical brain state. If this is not the case however, then pain (as a type) cannot be identical to a certain type of brain state. The type identity theory thus appears to be empirically unfounded. Despite these problems, there is a renewed interest in the type identity theory today, primarily due to the influence of Jaegwon Kim.[28]

But, even if this is the case, it does not follow that identity theories of all forms must be abandoned. According to token identity theories, the fact that a certain brain state is connected with only one "mental" state of a person does not have to mean that there is an absolute correlation between types of mental states and types of brain state. The idea of token identity is that only particular occurrences of mental events are identical with particular occurrences or tokenings of physical events.[28] Anomalous monism (see below) and most other non-reductive physicalisms are token-identity theories.[30] It is worth noting that that type identity entails token identity, but not vice-versa.

Functionalism

Functionalism was formulated by the American philosophers Hilary Putnam and Jerry Fodor as a reaction to the inadequacies of the type identity theory. Putnam and Fodor saw mental states in terms of an empirical computational theory of the mind.[31] At about the same time or slightly after, D.M. Armstrong and David Kellogg Lewis formulated a version of functionalism which analyzed the mental concepts of folk psychology in terms of functional roles.[32] Finally, Wittgenstein's idea of meaning as use led to a version of functionalism as a theory of meaning, further developed by Wilfrid Sellars and Gilbert Harman. Functionalists have claimed to find a precedent for their view in Aristotle's De Anima.[33]

What all these different varieties of functionalism share in common is the thesis that mental states are essentially characterized by their causal relations with other mental states and with sensory inputs and behavioral outputs. That is, functionalism abstracts away from the details of the physical implementation of a mental state by characterizing it in terms of non-mental functional properties. For example, a kidney is characterized scientifically by its functional role in filtering blood and maintaining certain chemical balances. From this point of view, it does not really matter whether the kidney be made up of organic tissue, plastic nanotubes or silicon chips: it is the role that it plays and its relations to other organs that define it as a kidney.[31] This allows a fairly straightforward answer to the multiple realizability problem - while different organisms that experience the same mental state may differ in 'low-level' properties (such as specific arrangement of neurons, or even chemical composition), the functionalist claim merely requires that they share some more abstract property. Just as one can make a mousetrap out of any variety of materials and in any number of configurations, the functionalist view allows that a mind with mental states like ours could in principle be realized in a wide variety of ways.

Nonreductive physicalism

Many philosophers firmly hold two convictions with regard to mind-body relations: 1) Physicalism is true and mental states must be physical states, and 2) All reductionist proposals are unsatisfactory: mental states cannot be explanatorily reduced to behavior, brain states or functional states.[24] Hence, the question arises whether there can still be a non-reductive physicalism.

The idea is often formulated in terms of the thesis of supervenience: mental states supervene on physical states, but are not reducible to them. This means that, as a matter of metaphysical necessity, there can be no change or variation in mental states without there being some change or variation in physical states, even while there is no way of giving an explanation or exhaustive characterization of the mental in terms of the physical.[34] Such a theory fits well with the bafflement many people feel when they try to imagine how something like qualia could ever be explained in the vocabulary of physics without accepting the metaphysical baggage of dualism.

Eliminative materialism

If one is a materialist but believes that all reductive efforts have failed and that a non-reductive materialism is incoherent, then one can adopt a final, more radical position: eliminative materialism. Eliminative materialists maintain that mental states are fictitious entities that are the subject matter of everyday "folk psychology."[9] Should folk psychology, which eliminativists view as a quasi-scientific theory, be proven wrong in the course of scientific development, then we must also abolish all of the entities postulated by it.

Eliminativists, the most notable being Patricia and Paul Churchland, often invoke the fate of other, erroneous popular theories and ontologies which have arisen in the course of history.[9][10] For example, the belief in witchcraft as a cause of people's problems turned out to be wrong and the consequence is that most people no longer believe in the existence of witches. Witchcraft is not explained in terms of some other phenomenon, but rather eliminated from the discourse. Similarly, while it might be possible to find some interpretation of the vocabulary of alchemy so that its claims would appear to be acceptable (a functionalist interpretation, for instance), this would be simply wrongheaded, for alchemy is a false science and the entities it postulated clearly do not exist.[10] The eliminative materialist view is, at heart, motivated by the belief that contemporary science should yield the ultimate verdict on what exists (a belief explicitly denied by Thomas Nagel).[19]

Linguistic criticism of the mind-body problem

Each attempt to answer the mind-body problem encounters substantial problems. Some philosophers argue that this is because there is an underlying conceptual confusion.[35] Such philosophers reject the mind-body problem as an illusory problem. Such a position is represented in analytic philosophy these days, for the most part, by the followers of Ludwig Wittgenstein and the Wittgensteinian tradition of linguistic criticism.[36] The exponents of this position explain that it is an error to ask how mental and biological states fit together. Rather it should simply be accepted that humans can be described in different ways - for instance, in a mental and in a biological vocabulary. Unnecessary problems arise if one tries to describe the one in terms of the other's vocabulary or if the mental vocabulary is used in the wrong contexts. This is the case for instance, if one searches for mental states of the brain. Talk about the brain is simply the wrong context for the use of mental vocabulary - the search for mental states of the brain is therefore a category error or a pure conceptual confusion.[36]

Today, such a position is often adopted by interpreters of Wittgenstein such as Peter Hacker.[35] Significantly, Hilary Putnam, one of the original defenders of functionalism, has recently argued in favor of something like the Wittgensteinian approach.[29] Nevertheless, many contemporary philosophers of mind remain unpersuaded by this general line. This is not surprising - most of the canonical discussions of the mind-body problem were by philosophers who saw themselves as dealing with something non-linguistic (such as Descartes' 'clear and distinct ideas'), so if the issue is based in linguistic confusion, that confusion would have to be one deeply buried enough to resist easy uncovering.

Naturalism and its problems

The thesis of physicalism is that the mind is part of the material (or physical) world. In contemporary discussions, most attacks on this position are based on the fact that the mind appears to have certain properties that no material thing possesses. Physicalism must therefore explain how it is possible that these properties can exist or emerge in a world consisting entirely of the entities described by natural science (in particular: physics). The project of providing such an explanation is often referred to as the "naturalization of the mental."[24] Naturalism about the mental is often attacked with an eye towards two features of our mental lives: the fact that much of it consists in conscious sensations or feels (called 'qualia'), and the fact that our minds involve states and events that represent or are about other things (this feature of them is called intentionality).

Qualia

Many mental states have the property of being experienced by the subject in a certain way - only I can know 'what it's like'.[19] For instance, it seems that no one is able to know how my headache feels except me, whereas everyone (if equipped with a sufficiently powerful brain-scanner) could come to know everything about the physical features of my brain that I do. Moreover, it seems to be a fundamental characteristic of natural science that the phenomena it considers can be experienced and understood by any scientific investigator (hence the expectation that all results of experiments be reproducible). This in turn leads to the requirement that all the explanations of natural science be similarly understandable. But in that case, how could science ever come to explain the 'what it's like' aspect of our mental states?

The problem of explaining the introspective, first-person experiential aspects of mental states, and consciousness in general, in terms of third-person quantitative neuroscience is called the explanatory gap.[37] There are several different views of the nature of this gap among contemporary philosophers of mind. David Chalmers and Frank Jackson (in his early work) interpret the gap as ontological in nature; that is, they maintain that qualia can never be explained by science because physicalism is false. There are simply two separate categories involved and one cannot be reduced to the other.[38] An alternative view is taken by philosophers such as Thomas Nagel and Colin McGinn. According to them, the gap is epistemological in nature. For Nagel, science is not yet able to explain subjective experience because it has not yet arrived at the level or kind of knowledge that is required. We are not even able to formulate the problem coherently.[19] For McGinn, on other hand, the problem is one of permanent and inherent biological limitations. We are not able to resolve the explanatory gap because the realm of subjective experiences is cognitively closed to us in the same manner that quantum physics is cognitively closed to elephants.[39] These epistemological views can in principle remain neutral on whether physicalism is true or not - for it seems possible that mental entities and properties be nothing more than physical entities and properties even while this is something that we can never establish (just as it seems possible that there be some entities in the universe that are undiscoverable, even though we would never be able to establish that fact).

Intentionality

John Searle - one of the most influential philosophers of mind, proponent of biological naturalism (Berkeley 2002)

Intentionality is the capacity of mental states to be directed towards (be about) something in the external world.[15] This property of mental states is also described in terms of their having 'representational content' and 'semantic referents,' and this in turn in what makes it appropriate to talk of their being true or false.

When one tries to reduce these states to natural states or processes there arises a problem: natural processes are not true or false, they simply happen.[40] It would appear to not make any sense to say that some state of the brain is true or false. But mental ideas or judgments are true or false, so how then can mental states (ideas or judgments) be natural processes?[15] In response to such a worry, some naturalist-inclined philosophers have attempted to give an account of representation and intentionality that is fully compatible with a physicalist ontology.[41]

Consequences of philosophy of mind

There are countless subjects that are affected by the ideas developed in the philosophy of mind. We know a great amount about what the nature of physical bodies, and if physicalism were true, we would be committed to ascribing certain properties of the brain to the mind. For instance, we know that brains are divisible and destructable, so if the mind=the brain, then that would mean that the mind was divisible and destructable (in fact, Descartes' certainty that the mind wasn't divisible and destructable was one of his main reasons for rejecting positions like physicalism - see above).

Two issues are worth emphasizing in this connection: freedom of the will and the nature of the self.

Free will

In the context of the philosophy of mind, the question about the freedom of the will takes on a renewed intensity. This is certainly the case, at least, for materialistic determinists.[8] According to this position, natural laws completely determine the course of the material world. Mental states, and therefore the will as well, would be material entities, and so completely determined by natural laws. Some philosophers take this argumentation a step further: not only, if materialism is correct, are people unable to do otherwise than what they do, but people cannot determine by themselves what they want and what they do - what happens is out of their control. Consequently, they are not free.[42]

Immanuel Kant rejected compatibilism

Such a view is rejected by by advocates of compatibilism. Those who adopt this position suggest that the question "Are we free?" can only be answered once we have determined what the term "free" means. The opposite of "free," one might argue, is not "caused" but "compelled" or "coerced." It is not appropriate to identify freedom with indetermination or the ability to simply have done otherwise. A free act is one where the agent could have done otherwise if he or she had chosen otherwise. But this view allows that the decisions themselves can be causally determined. In this sense a person can be free even though determinism is true.[42] Perhaps the most important compatibilist in the history of the philosophy was David Hume,[43] though similar positions are found at least as far back as the Stoics. Nowadays, this position is defended, for example, by Daniel Dennett,[44] and, from a dual-aspect perspective, by Max Velmans.[45]

On the other hand, there are also many incompatibilists who reject the argument because they believe that the will is free in a stronger sense called 'libertarianisml.[42] These philosophers affirm that the course of the world is not completely determined by natural laws: the will at least does not have to be and, therefore, it is potentially free. Perhaps the most prominent incompatibilist in the history of philosophy was Immanuel Kant.[46] A contemporary advocate of the view is Peter van Inwagen.[47] Yet incompatibilism takes on quite different forms depending on the background philosophy of mind - for a physicalist, this requires that one reject the view that physical laws are deterministic. Kant, however, used the intuitions motivating libertarianism to motivate his view that the will is itself not properly part of the physical world.

The self

The philosophy of mind also has important consequences for the concept of self. If by "self" or "I" one refers to an essential, immutable nucleus of the person, most modern philosophers of mind (accepting physicalism) will affirm that no such thing exists.[48] The idea of a self has historically been tied to the idea of an immaterial soul (Descartes, for instance, identified the two). In addition to skepticism arising from physicalism, many philosophers also follow David Hume in questioning what introspective basis we even have for believing that such an entity exists.[49]

In view of this problem, some philosophers affirm that we should abandon the idea of a self. Another view is that we should redefine the concept: by "self" we would not be referring to some immutable and essential nucleus, but to something that is in permanent change. A contemporary defender of this position is Daniel Dennett.[48]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Plato, Phaedo, Edited by E.A. Duke, W.F. Hicken, W.S.M. Nicoll, D.B. Robinson, and J.C.G. Strachan, (London: Clarendon Press, 1995).
  2. H. Robinson, "Aristotelian dualism," Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy, 1 (Oxford University Press, 1983), 123-144.
  3. Martha C. Nussbaum, "Aristotelian dualism," Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy, 2 (Oxford University Press, 1984), 197-207.
  4. Martha C. Nussbaum and A.O. Rorty, (eds.)Essays on Aristotle's De Anima (London: Clarendon Press, 1992).
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 René Descartes, Discourse on Method and Meditations on First Philosophy (Hacket Publishing Company, ISBN 0872204219).
  6. W.D. Hart, "Dualism," in Samuel Guttenplan (org) A Companion to the Philosophy of Mind (London: Blackwell, Oxford University Press, 1996), 265-267.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Baruch Spinoza, Tractatus Theologico-Politicus (A Theologico-Political Treatise), (1670).
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 J. Kim, "Mind-Body Problem," Oxford Companion to Philosophy, edited by Ted Honderich (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 1995).
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 Patricia Churchland, Neurophilosophy: Toward a Unified Science of the Mind-Brain (MIT Press, 1986).
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 Paul Churchland, "Eliminative Materialism and the Propositional Attitudes," Journal of Philosophy (1981): 67-90.
  11. J.J.C. Smart, "Sensations and Brain Processes," Philosophical Review (1956).
  12. Donald Davidson, Essays on Actions and Events (Oxford University Press, 1980, ISBN 0199246270).
  13. Hilary Putnam, "Psychological Predicates," in W.H. Capitan and D.D. Merrill, eds., Art, Mind and Religion (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1967).
  14. Daniel Dennett, The Intentional Stance (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1998, ISBN 0262540533).
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 John Searle, Intentionality: A Paper on the Philosophy of Mind (Frankfurt a. M.: Nachdr. Suhrkamp, 2001, ISBN 3518285564).
  16. 16.0 16.1 David Chalmers, The Conscious Mind (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 1997).
  17. Peter Unger, All the Power in the World (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2006).
  18. 18.0 18.1 Frank Jackson, “Epiphenomenal Qualia.” Reprinted in David Chalmers, ed. Philosophy of Mind: Classical and Contemporary Readings (Oxford University Press, 2002).
  19. 19.0 19.1 19.2 19.3 T. Nagel, "What is it like to be a bat?" Philosophical Review 83(1974): 435-456.
  20. Karl Popper and John Eccles, The Self and Its Brain (Springer Verlag, 2002, ISBN 3492210961).
  21. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Monadology (1714).
  22. Shadworth Hollway Hodgson, Time and Space: a Metaphysical Essay (HardPress Publishing, 2019 (original 1865), ISBN 978-0461030402).
  23. Frank Jackson, "What Mary didn't know." Journal of Philosophy (1986): 291-295.
  24. 24.0 24.1 24.2 24.3 24.4 24.5 Daniel Stoljar, Physicalism The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2001. Retrieved June 17, 2020.
  25. E. Mach, Die Analyse der Empfindungen und das Verhältnis des Physischen zum Psychischen, Fifth edition, translated as The Analysis of Sensations and the Relation of Physical to the Psychical (New York: Dover, 1959).
  26. B.F. Skinner, Beyond Freedom & Dignity (New York: Bantam/Vintage Books, 1972).
  27. Gilbert Ryle, The Concept of Mind (Chicago University Press, 1949, ISBN 0226732959).
  28. 28.0 28.1 28.2 28.3 J.J.C. Smart, The Mind/Brain Identity Theory, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, May 18, 2007. Retrieved June 17, 2020.
  29. 29.0 29.1 Hilary Putnam, The Threefold Cord: Mind, Body, and World (New York: Columbia University Press, 2000, ISBN 0231102860).
  30. D. Davidson, Subjective, Intersubjective, Objective (Oxford University Press, 2001, ISBN 8870788326).
  31. 31.0 31.1 Ned Block, "What is functionalism," in Readings in Philosophy of Psychology, in 2 vols. Vol 1. (Cambridge, MA: Harvard, 1980).
  32. D.M. Armstrong, A Materialist Theory of the Mind (London: Routledge, 1968).
  33. Martha C. Nussbaum and Hilary Putnam, "Changing Aristotle's mind." In Nussbaum, M.C., and Rorty, A.O. (eds.), Essays on Aristotle's De Anima (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1992), 27-56.
  34. W.L. Stanton, "Supervenience and Psychological Law in Anomalous Monism," Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 64 (1983): 72-79.
  35. 35.0 35.1 Peter Hacker, Philosophical Foundations of Neuroscience (London: Blackwell, 2003, ISBN 140510838X).
  36. 36.0 36.1 Ludwig Wittgenstein, Philosophical Investigations (New York: Macmillan, 1954).
  37. Joseph Levine, "Materialism and Qualia: The Explanatory Gap," in: Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 64 (4) (October 1983): 354-361
  38. F. Jackson, (1986) "What Mary didn't Know," Journal of Philosophy 83(5): 291-295.
  39. Colin McGinn, Can We Solve the Mind—Body Problem? Mind New Series, 98(391) (1989): 349-36.
  40. Jerry Fodor, Psychosemantics: The problem of meaning in the philosophy of mind (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1993, ISBN 0262061066).
  41. Fred Dretske, Knowledge and the Flow of Information (Stanford: CSLI Publications, 1999, ISBN 157586195X).
  42. 42.0 42.1 42.2 Ted Honderich Philosopher Ted Honderich's Determinism web resource, Freedom & Determinism Philosophy. Retrieved June 17, 2020.
  43. Paul Russell. Freedom and Moral Sentiment: Hume's Way of Naturalizing Responsibility. (New York & Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995.)
  44. Daniel Dennett, The Varieties of Free Will Worth Wanting (Cambridge, MA: Bradford Books-MIT Press, 1984, ISBN 0262540428).
  45. Max Velmans, How could conscious experiences affect brains? (Exeter: Imprint Academic, 2003, ISBN 0907845398).
  46. Immanuel Kant, Critique of Pure Reason translated by F. Max Muller, (Garden City, NY: Dolphin Books, Doubleday & Co., 1961).
  47. Peter van Inwagen, An Essay on Free Will (Oxford University Press, 1983).
  48. 48.0 48.1 Daniel C. Dennett and D.R. Hofstadter, The Mind's I (Bantam Books, 1981, ISBN 0553014129).
  49. John Serle, Mind: A Brief Introduction. (Oxford University Press Inc, 2005, ISBN 0195157338).

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Armstrong, D.M. A Materialist Theory of the Mind, second ed. London: Routledge, 1993. ISBN 0415100313
  • Block, Ned. "What is functionalism," in Readings in Philosophy of Psychology, in 2 vols. Vol 1. Cambridge, MA: Harvard, 1980.
  • Capitan, W.H., and D.D. Merrill (eds.). Art, Mind and Religion. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. 1967.
  • Chalmers, David. The Conscious Mind. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 1997. ISBN 0195117891
  • Chalmers, David (ed.). Philosophy of Mind: Classical and Contemporary Readings. Oxford University Press, 2002.
  • Churchland, Patricia. Neurophilosophy: Toward a Unified Science of the Mind-Brain. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1986. ISBN 0262031167
  • Churchland, Paul, "Eliminative Materialism and the Propositional Attitudes," Journal of Philosophy (1981).
  • Davidson, Donald. Essays on Actions and Events. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 1980. ISBN 0199246270
  • Dennett, Daniel. The Varieties of Free Will Worth Wanting. Cambridge, MA: Bradford Books-MIT Press, 1984. ISBN 0262540428.
  • Dennett, Daniel C., and D.R. Hofstadter. The Mind's I. Bantam Books, 1981. ISBN 0553014129.
  • Descartes, René. Discourse on Method and Meditations on First Philosophy. Hacket Publishing Company. ISBN 0872204219
  • Dretske, Fred. Knowledge and the Flow of Information. Stanford: CSLI Publications, 1999. ISBN 157586195X.
  • Fodor, Jerry. Psychosemantics. The problem of meaning in the philosophy of mind. Cambridge: MIT Press, 1993. ISBN 0262061066.
  • Hacker, Peter. Philosophical Foundations of Neuroscience. Blackwel Pub., 2003. ISBN 140510838X.
  • Hart, W.D. "Dualism," in Samuel Guttenplan (org) A Companion to the Philosophy of Mind. London: Blackwell, Oxford University Press, 1996.
  • Hodgson, Shadworth Hollway. Time and Space: a Metaphysical Essay. HardPress Publishing, 2019. ISBN 978-0461030402
  • Inwagen, Peter van. An Essay on Free Will. Oxford University Press, 1983.
  • Jackson, F. "What Mary didn't Know," Journal of Philosophy 83 (5) (1986): 291-295.
  • Kant, Immanuel. Critique of Pure Reason, translated by F. Max Muller. Garden City, NY:Dolphin Books, Doubleday & Co., 1781.
  • Kim, Jaegwon. "Mind-Body Problem," Oxford Companion to Philosophy, edited by Ted Honderich. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 199).
  • Levine, Joseph. "Materialism and Qualia: The Explanatory Gap," in Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 64(4) (October, 1983): 354–361.
  • McGinn, C. "Can the Mind-Body Problem Be Solved," Mind New Series, 98 (391): 349-366.
  • Nussbaum. Martha C., and H. Putnam. "Changing Aristotle's mind." In Nussbaum, M.C. and Rorty, A.O. (eds.), Essays on Aristotle's De Anima. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1992, 27-56.
  • Popper, Karl, and John Eccles. The Self and Its Brain. Springer Verlag, 2002. ISBN 3492210961
  • Putnam, Hilary. The Threefold Cord: Mind, Body, and World. New York: Columbia University Press, 2000. ISBN 0231102860.
  • Russell, Paul. Freedom and Moral Sentiment: Hume's Way of Naturalizing Responsibility. Oxford University Press, 1995.
  • Ryle, Gilbert. The Concept of Mind. Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1949. ISBN 0226732959.
  • Searle, John. Intentionality. A Paper on the Philosophy of Mind. Frankfurt a. M.: Nachdr. Suhrkamp., 2001. ISBN 3518285564
  • Searle, John. Mind: A Brief Introduction. Oxford University Press Inc, USA. 2005. ISBN 0195157338
  • Skinner, B.F. Beyond Freedom & Dignity. New York: Bantam/Vintage Books, 1972.
  • Stanton, W.L. "Supervenience and Psychological Law in Anomalous Monism," in Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 64 (1983): 72-9
  • Unger, Peter. All the Power in the World. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2006.
  • Velmans, Max. How could conscious experiences affect brains?. Exeter: Imprint Academic, 2003. ISBN 0907845398.
  • Wittgenstein, Ludwig. Philosophical Investigations. New York: Macmillan, 1954.

External links

All links retrieved November 23, 2022.


General Philosophy Sources

Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.