Some years
ago, at an initially friendly dinner after a conference, I sat next to a fellow
Catholic academic, to whom I mildly expressed the opinion that it had been a
mistake for Catholic theologians to move away from the arguments of natural
theology that had been so vigorously championed by Neo-Scholastic writers. He responded in something like a paroxysm of
fury, sputtering bromides of the sort familiar from personalist and nouvelle theologie criticisms of
Neo-Scholasticism. Taken aback by this
sudden change in the tone of our conversation, I tried to reassure him that I
was not denying that the approaches he preferred had their place, and reminded
him that belief in the philosophical demonstrability of God’s existence was,
after all, just part of Catholic doctrine.
But it was no use. Nothing I said
in response could mollify him. It was
like he’d seen a ghost he thought had been exorcised long ago, and couldn’t
pull out of the subsequent panic attack.
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
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
Averroism and cloud computing
The Latin
followers of the medieval Islamic philosopher Ibn Rushd or Averroes (1126 - 1198),
such as Siger of Brabant,
famously taught the doctrine of the unity
of the human intellect. The basic
idea is this: The intellect, Averroists (like other
Aristotelians) argue, is immaterial.
But in that case, they conclude (as not all Aristotelians
would), it cannot be regarded as the form of a material body. It is instead a substance entirely separated
from matter. But matter, the
Aristotelian holds, is the principle by which one instance of the form of some
species is distinguished from another.
Hence there is no way in which one human intellect could be
distinguished from another, so that there must be only a single intellect
shared by all human beings.
Monday, November 11, 2013
Some questions on the soul, Part III
In some recent posts I’ve been answering readers’ questions about the Aristotelian-Thomistic (A-T) understanding of the soul. One more for the road, from a reader who is unclear about why mind-body interaction, which is notoriously problematic for Cartesian dualism, is not also problematic for A-T. The reader writes:
[U]nless something like dualist
interactionism is true, I don't see how… immaterial thoughts and - in
particular - the will - could possibly cause me to do something as simple as
typing this e-mail…
Science would seem to say that the
efficient cause of this was certain electrochemical reactions in my body.
The material cause would be the physical events happening in my body. It
seems that A-T philosophy would hold that the final cause was getting an answer
to a philosophical question, and I agree. My soul would then be the
formal cause, but I guess that notion is incoherent to me… And, unless the
immaterial mind somehow interacts with my body (through quantum physics,
maybe?), I don't see how my thinking about something in my immaterial intellect
could cause my body to do anything.
Saturday, October 19, 2013
Do machines compute functions?
Robert
Oerter has
now replied to my
most recent post about his criticisms of James Ross’s argument for the
immateriality of the intellect. Let me
begin my rejoinder with a parable. Suppose
you presented someone with the argument: All
men are mortal; Socrates is a man; therefore, Socrates is mortal. He says he is unconvinced. Puzzled, you ask him why. He replies that he is surprised that you
think Socrates is mortal, given that you believe in the immortality of the
soul. He adds that all you’ve done in
any case is to make an epistemological point about what we know about Socrates, and not really given any reason to think that
Socrates is mortal. For though the
conclusion does, he concedes, follow from the premises, and the premises are
supported by the evidence, maybe for all we know there is still somehow more to
men than what the premises tell us.
Monday, October 14, 2013
Some questions on the soul, Part II
In a
recent post I responded to a reader’s question about the
Aristotelian-Thomistic understanding of the soul. Another reader asks another question. Let me set out some background before
addressing it. From the
Aristotelian-Thomistic point of view, strictly intellectual activity -- as
opposed, say, to sensation or imagination -- is
not corporeal. This is the key to
the soul’s immortality. A human being is
the sort of thing that carries out both non-corporeal and corporeal activities. Though less than an angel, he is more than an
ape, having a metaphysical foot, as it were, in both the immaterial and
material camps. That means that when his
corporeal operations go, as they do upon death, it doesn’t follow that he goes.
He limps along, as it were, reduced to the
non-corporeal side of his nature.
This reduction is drastic, for a great deal of what we do -- not only
walking, talking, breathing, and eating, but seeing, hearing, smelling, and so
forth -- depends on the body.
Friday, October 4, 2013
Why Is There Anything At All? It’s Simple
Note: The following article is cross-posted
over at First Things.
I thank John
Leslie and Robert Lawrence Kuhn for their
gracious and substantive response to my
recent comments on their fine anthology The
Mystery of Existence: Why Is There Anything At All? In the course of my earlier remarks, I put
forward a “friendly criticism” to the effect that John and Robert had paid
insufficient attention in their book to the tradition of classical theism,
which has its philosophical roots in Aristotelian and Neo-Platonic thought and whose
many illustrious representatives include Augustine, Anselm, Avicenna,
Maimonides, and Aquinas. Though there
are selections from some of these writers, they are very brief, and the bulk of
the theological selections in the book are from recent writers of what has
sometimes been called a “theistic personalist” or “neo-theist” bent. John and Robert have offered a lively defense
of their approach. In what follows I’d
like to respond, pressing the case for the primacy of the classical theistic
tradition.
Saturday, September 14, 2013
Man is Wolff to man
As a
follow-up to my
series of posts on the critics of Thomas Nagel’s Mind and Cosmos, let’s take a look at philosopher Robert Paul
Wolff’s recent
remarks about the book. Wolff is not
nasty, as some of the critics have been -- Nagel is Wolff’s “old friend and
one-time student” -- but he is nevertheless as unfair to Nagel as some of them
have been.
Most of his
post is not about Nagel at all, but consists of an anecdote about Edward O.
Wilson and some remarks about the wealth of knowledge Wolff has found in the
biology books he’s read. The point is to
illustrate how very meticulous good scientists can be, and how much they have
discovered about the biological realm.
All well and good. But so
what? What does that have to do with
Nagel?
Friday, September 6, 2013
Churchland on dualism, Part V
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.
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, NoĂ« 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…
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