Paul
Churchland has just published a
third edition of Matter and Consciousness,
his widely used introductory textbook on the philosophy of mind. The blog Philosophy of Brains has posted a
symposium on the book, with contributions from Amy Kind, William Ramsey,
and Pete Mandik. Prof. Kind, who deals
with Churchland’s discussion of dualism, is kind to him indeed -- a little too
kind, as it happens. Longtime readers
will recall a series of posts I did several years ago on the previous edition
of Churchland’s book, in which I showed how extremely superficial, misleading,
and frankly incompetent is its treatment of dualism. Prof. Kind commends Churchland’s “clear
writing style and incisive argumentation” as “a model for us all.” While I agree with her about the clarity of
Churchland’s style, I cannot concur with her judgment of the quality of the
book’s argumentation, for at least with respect to dualism, this new edition is
as bad as the old.
Showing posts sorted by date for query mind-body. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query mind-body. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Friday, September 6, 2013
Thursday, August 15, 2013
Eliminativism without truth, Part III
Now comes
the main event. Having first set
out some background ideas, and then looked
at his positive arguments for eliminativism about intentionality, we turn
at last to Alex Rosenberg’s attempt to defend his position from the charge of
incoherence in his paper “Eliminativism without
Tears.” He offers three general
lines of argument. The first purports to
show that a key version of the objection from incoherence begs the
question. The second purports to give an
explanation of how what he characterizes as the “illusion” of intentionality
arises. The third purports to offer an
intentionality-free characterization of information processing in the brain, in
terms of which the eliminativist can state his position without implicitly
appealing to the very intentionality-laden notions he rejects. Let’s look at each argument in turn.
Thursday, August 8, 2013
Eliminativism without truth, Part II
We’re
looking at Alex Rosenberg’s attempt to defend eliminative materialism from the
charge of incoherence in his paper “Eliminativism without
Tears.” Having set out some
background ideas in an
earlier post, let’s turn to the essay itself. It has four main parts: two devoted to arguments
for eliminativism, and two devoted to responses to the charge of
incoherence. I’ll consider each in turn.
Monday, August 5, 2013
Eliminativism without truth, Part I
Suppose you
hold that a good scientific explanation should make no reference to teleology,
final causality, purpose, directedness-toward-an-end, or the like as an
inherent and irreducible feature of the natural order. And suppose you hold that what is real is
only what science tells us is real. Then
you are at least implicitly committed to denying that even human purposes or ends are real, and also to denying that the
intentionality of thought and the semantic content of speech and writing are
real. Scientism, in short, entails a radical eliminativism. Alex
Rosenberg and I agree on that much -- he defends this thesis in The
Atheist’s Guide to Reality and I defend it in The
Last Superstition. Where we
differ is over the lesson to be drawn from this thesis. Rosenberg holds that scientism is true, so
that eliminativism must be true as well.
I maintain that eliminativism is incoherent, and constitutes a reductio ad absurdum of the scientism
that leads to it. I responded to
Rosenberg at length in a series
of posts on his book.
In his paper
“Eliminativism without Tears,” Rosenberg attempts in a more systematic way than
he has elsewhere to respond to the charge of incoherence. Rosenberg kindly sent me this paper some time
ago, and I note that it is now available online.
Friday, June 21, 2013
Mind and Cosmos roundup
My series of
posts on the critics of Thomas Nagel’s Mind
and Cosmos has gotten a fair amount of attention. Andrew Ferguson’s cover
story on Nagel in The Weekly Standard,
published when I was six posts into the series, kindly cited it as a “dazzling…
tour de force rebutting Nagel’s critics.”
Now that the series is over it seems worthwhile gathering together the
posts (along with some related materials) for easy future reference.
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Body movin’, mind thinkin’
The human body is the best picture of
the human soul.
Ludwig
Wittgenstein, Philosophical
Investigations
We recall that John B. Watson did not
claim that quite all thought was incipient speech; it was all incipient twitching of muscles, and mostly of speech muscles.
W. V. Quine,
“Mind and Verbal Dispositions”
We're getting down computer action
Do the robotic satisfaction
Do the robotic satisfaction
Beastie
Boys, “Body Movin’”
To perceive
a human being behaving in certain
characteristic ways just is to perceive him as thinking. There are two
ways to read such a claim: Quine’s and Watson’s reductionist way, and
Wittgenstein’s anti-reductionist way.
The Beastie Boys, of course, were putting forward a
computational-functionalist variation on Quinean behaviorism. (OK, not really. Just pretend.
It’s a better quote than any I could have gleaned from a functionalist
philosopher.)
Friday, May 17, 2013
Nagel and his critics, Part IX
Returning to
my
series on the critics of Thomas Nagel’s Mind
and Cosmos, let’s look at the recent Commonweal magazine symposium on the book. The contributors are philosopher Gary
Gutting, biologist Kenneth Miller, and physicist Stephen Barr. I’ll remark on each contribution in turn.
Thursday, March 28, 2013
Nagel and his critics, Part VIII
Resuming our series on the serious critics of Thomas Nagel’s Mind and Cosmos, let’s turn to Simon Blackburn’s review in New
Statesman from a few months back. Blackburn’s review is negative, but it is not
polemical; on the contrary, he allows that the book is “beautifully lucid,
civilised, modest in tone and courageous in its scope” and even that there is
“charm” to it. Despite the review’s now somewhat notorious closing
paragraph (more on which below) I think Blackburn is trying to be fair to
Nagel.
Thursday, March 21, 2013
Nagel and his critics, Part VII
Let’s return
to our
look at the critics of Thomas Nagel’s Mind
and Cosmos. New commentary on Nagel’s
book continues to appear, and to some extent it repeats points made by earlier
reviewers I’ve already responded to. Here
I want to say something about Mohan
Matthen’s review in The Philosophers Magazine. In particular, I want to address what Matthen
says about the issue of whether conscious awareness could arise in a purely
material cosmos. (Matthen has also
commented on Nagel’s book over at the New APPS blog, e.g. here.)
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
A Christian Hart, a Humean head
Note: The following article is cross-posted
over at First Things.
In a
piece in the March issue of First Things,
David Bentley Hart suggests that the arguments of natural law theorists are
bound to be ineffectual in the public square.
The reason is that such arguments mistakenly presuppose that there is
sufficient conceptual common ground between natural law theorists and their
opponents for fruitful moral debate to be possible. In particular, they presuppose that “the
moral meaning of nature should be perfectly evident to any properly reasoning
mind, regardless of religious belief or cultural formation.” In fact, Hart claims, there is no such common
ground, insofar as “our concept of nature, in any age, is entirely dependent
upon supernatural (or at least metaphysical) convictions.” For Hart, it is only when we look at nature
from a very specific religious and cultural perspective that we will see it the
way natural law theorists need us to see it in order for their arguments to be
compelling. And since such a perspective
on nature “must be received as an apocalyptic interruption of our ordinary
explanations,” as a deliverance of special divine revelation rather than
secular reason, it is inevitably one that not all parties to public debate are
going to share.
Thursday, February 21, 2013
Noë on the origin of life etc.
UC Berkeley
philosopher (and atheist)
Alva Noë is, as
we saw not too long ago, among the more perceptive and interesting critics
of Thomas Nagel’s Mind and Cosmos. In a
recent brief follow-up post, Noë revisits the controversy over Nagel’s
book, focusing on the question of the origin of life. Endorsing some remarks made by philosopher of
biology Peter Godfrey-Smith, Noë holds that while we have a good idea of how
species originate, there is no plausible existing scientific explanation of how
life arose in the first place:
This is probably not, I would say,
due to the fact that the relevant events happened a long time ago. Our problem isn't merely historical in nature,
that is. If that were all that was at
stake, then we might expect that, now at least, we would be able to make life
in a test tube. But we can't do that. We don't know how.
Monday, January 21, 2013
Schliesser on the Evolutionary Argument against Naturalism
I
commented recently on the remarks about Thomas Nagel’s Mind
and Cosmos made by Eric Schliesser over at the New APPS blog. Schliesser has now posted an
interesting set of objections to Alvin Plantinga’s “Evolutionary
Argument against Naturalism” (EAAN), which features in Nagel’s book. Schliesser’s latest comments illustrate, I
think, how very far one must move
away from what Wilfred Sellars called the “manifest
image” in order to try to respond to the most powerful objections to
naturalism -- and how the result threatens naturalism with incoherence (as it
does with Alex
Rosenberg’s more extreme position).
Saturday, December 29, 2012
Trabbic on TLS
Philosopher Joseph Trabbic kindly reviews The Last Superstition in the latest issue of the Saint Austin Review. From the review:
[This] is no ordinary book of apologetics. Edward Feser is a professional philosopher of an analytic bent whose main body of work is in the fields of philosophy of mind, moral and political philosophy, philosophy of religion, and economic theory. Thus, alongside a number of scholarly articles, Feser has published introductory volumes to contemporary philosophy of mind, John Locke, Robert Nozick, and, most recently, Thomas Aquinas. He has edited the Cambridge Companion to Hayek (the Austro-British economist and philosopher) as well. Feser’s qualifications allow him to prosecute his case with a philosophical sophistication that is not found in many apologetic treatises. One might say that as a Christian apologist Feser is overqualified…
Monday, December 24, 2012
Nagel and his critics, Part VI
We’ve been
looking at the critics of Thomas Nagel’s recent book Mind
and Cosmos. Having examined the
objections raised by Brian
Leiter and Michael Weisberg, Elliott
Sober, Alva
Noë, and John
Dupré, I want to turn now to some interesting remarks made by Eric
Schliesser in a series of posts on Nagel over at the New APPS blog. Schliesser’s comments concern, first, the
way the scientific revolution is portrayed by Nagel’s critics, and second, the
role the Principle of Sufficient Reason plays in Nagel’s book. Most recently, in response to my own series
of posts, Schliesser has also commented on the
status of naturalism in contemporary philosophy. Let’s look at each of these sets of remarks
in turn.
Friday, November 30, 2012
Nagel and his critics, Part IV
Continuing our
look at the critics of Thomas Nagel’s recent book Mind
and Cosmos, we turn to philosopher Alva Noë’s very interesting remarks over
at NPR’s 13.7: Cosmos & Culture blog.
Noë’s initial comments might seem broadly sympathetic to Nagel’s
position. He writes:
Science has produced no standard
account of the origins of life.
We have a superb understanding of how
we get biological variety from simple, living starting points. We can thank
Darwin for that. And we know that life in its simplest forms is built up out of
inorganic stuff. But we don't have any account of how life springs forth from
the supposed primordial soup. This is an explanatory gap we have no idea how to
bridge.
Science also lacks even a
back-of-the-envelop [sic] concept explaining the emergence of consciousness
from the behavior of mere matter. We have an elaborate understanding of the
ways in which experience depends on neurobiology. But how consciousness arises
out of the action of neurons, or how low-level chemical or atomic processes
might explain why we are conscious — we haven't a clue.
We aren't even really sure what
questions we should be asking.
These two explanatory gaps are
strikingly similar… In both cases we have large-scale phenomena in view (life,
consciousness) and an exquisitely detailed understanding of the low-level
processes that sustain these phenomena (biochemistry, neuroscience, etc). But
we lack any way of making sense of the idea that the higher-level phenomena
just come down to, or consist of, what is going on at the lower level.
Saturday, November 17, 2012
Nagel and his critics, Part III
In the previous installment in this series of posts on Thomas Nagel’s Mind and Cosmos, I looked at some objections to Nagel raised by Brian Leiter and Michael Weisberg. I want now to turn to Elliot Sober’s review in Boston Review. To his credit, and unlike Leiter and Weisberg, Sober is careful to acknowledge that:
Nagel’s main goal in this book is not
to argue against materialistic reductionism, but to explore the consequences of
its being false. He has argued against
the -ism elsewhere, and those who know their Nagel will be able to fill in the
details.
Sober then
goes on to offer a brief summary of the relevant positions Nagel has defended
in earlier works like his articles “What Is It Like to Be a Bat?” and “The
Psychophysical Nexus.” As I emphasized in
my previous post, keeping these earlier arguments in mind is crucial to giving the
position Nagel develops in Mind and
Cosmos a fair reading. Unfortunately,
however, having reminded his readers of these earlier arguments of Nagel’s,
Sober immediately goes on to ignore them.
Saturday, October 27, 2012
Nagel and his critics, Part II
Whereas my
First Things review of Thomas
Nagel’s Mind
and Cosmos accentuated the positive, the first
post in this series put forward some criticisms of the book. Let’s turn now to the objections against
Nagel raised by Brian Leiter and Michael Weisberg in their
review in The Nation.
First some
stage setting is in order. As I
indicated in the previous post, Mind and
Cosmos is mostly devoted to the positive task of spelling out what a
non-materialist version of naturalism might look like. The negative task of criticizing materialist
forms of naturalism is carried out in only a relatively brief and sketchy way,
and here Nagel is essentially relying on arguments he and others have developed
at greater length elsewhere. Especially
relevant for present purposes is a line of argument Nagel put forward in what
is perhaps his most famous piece of writing -- his widely reprinted 1974
article “What Is
It Like to Be a Bat?” -- and developed further in later works like The
View From Nowhere.
Friday, October 12, 2012
Whose nature? Which law?
You’ve got
your natural law. You’ve got your natural rights. You’ve got the
state of nature. Then there’s naturalism. And laws of nature. And the supernatural. There’s St. Paul’s natural man and the Scholastics’ natura pura. There’s nature and nature’s God. There’s natural
science, natural history, natural selection, natural theology, natural
philosophy, and the philosophy of
nature. There’s the Baconian
scientist putting nature on the rack,
and Galileo telling us that the book of
nature is written in the language of mathematics. And let’s not forget the literal books, like Lucretius’s
On the Nature of Things, Hume’s Treatise of Human Nature, Richard
Rorty’s Philosophy and the Mirror of
Nature, and Edward O. Wilson’s On Human
Nature. There’s Emerson’s essay
“Nature.” For fans of underground
comics, there’s Mr. Natural;
for fans of obscure superheroes too preposterous ever to get their own
billion-dollar-grossing film adaptations, there’s Nature
Boy. There’s Oliver Stone’s movie
Natural Born Killers and Robert
Redford in The Natural. There’s Ringo
Starr singing “Act Naturally,” Aretha Franklin’s “(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman,” the Steely Dan album Two Against Nature,
and that stupid Gilbert
O’Sullivan tune.
There are natural disasters, natural resources, natural
gas, and dying of natural causes. There’s natural
beauty, but also freaks of nature. There’s going back to nature and getting a natural
high. There are Mother Nature, nature hikes,
all natural foods, natural family planning and natural childbirth. There’s the natural order, and second
nature. There are natural numbers. There are all the examples I didn’t think of. There are blog posts that are starting to
sound like George Carlin
routines.
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Was Aquinas a dualist?
At the start
of chapter 4 of Aquinas
(the chapter on “Psychology”), I wrote:
As I have emphasized throughout this
book, understanding Aquinas requires “thinking outside the box” of the basic
metaphysical assumptions (concerning cause, effect, substance, essence, etc.)
that contemporary philosophers tend to take for granted. This is nowhere more true than where
Aquinas’s philosophy of mind is concerned.
Indeed, to speak of Aquinas’s “philosophy of mind” is already
misleading. For Aquinas does not
approach the issues dealt with in this modern philosophical sub-discipline in
terms of their relevance to solving the so-called “mind-body problem.” No such problem existed in Aquinas’s day, and
for him the important distinction was in any case not between mind and body,
but rather between soul and body. Even
that is potentially misleading, however, for Aquinas does not mean by “soul”
what contemporary philosophers tend to mean by it, i.e. an immaterial substance
of the sort affirmed by Descartes.
Furthermore, while contemporary philosophers of mind tend to obsess over
the questions of whether and how science can explain consciousness and the
“qualia” that define it, Aquinas instead takes what is now called
“intentionality” to be the distinctive feature of the mind, and the one that it
is in principle impossible to explain in materialistic terms. At the same time, he does not think of
intentionality in quite the way contemporary philosophers do. Moreover, while he is not a materialist, he
is not a Cartesian dualist either, his view being in some respects a middle
position between these options. But neither
is this middle position the standard one discussed by contemporary philosophers
under the label “property dualism.” And
so forth.
Friday, August 31, 2012
Animals are conscious! In other news, sky is blue, water wet
A reader
calls my attention to a
Discovery News story which breathlessly declares:
A prominent
group of scientists signs a document stating that animals are just as
“conscious and aware” as humans are.
This is a big deal.
Actually, it is not a big deal,
nor in any way news, and the really interesting thing about this story is how
completely uninteresting it is. Animals
are conscious? Anyone who has ever owned
a pet, or been to the zoo, or indeed just knows what an animal is, knows that.
OK, almost anyone. Descartes notoriously denied it, for reasons
tied to his brand of dualism. And
perhaps that is one reason someone might think animal consciousness
remarkable. It might be supposed that if
you regard the human mind as something immaterial, you have to regard animals
as devoid of consciousness, so that evidence of animal consciousness is
evidence against the immateriality of the mind and thus a “big deal.” This is not what the article says, mind you,
but it is one way to make sense of why it presents the evidence of animal consciousness
as if it were noteworthy.
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