For readers who might be interested, I thought it would be useful to gather together in one place links to various posts on the mind-body problem and other issues in the philosophy of mind. Like much of what you’ll find on this blog, these posts develop and apply ideas and arguments stated more fully in my various books and articles. Naturally, I address various issues in the philosophy of mind at length in my book Philosophy of Mind, of which you can find a detailed table of contents here. (The cover illustration by Andrzej Klimowski you see to the left is from the first edition.) You will find my most recent and detailed exposition of the Aristotelian-Thomistic (A-T) approach to issues in the philosophy of mind in chapter 4 of Aquinas. There is a lot of material on the mind-body problem to be found in The Last Superstition, especially in various sections of the last three chapters. And there is also relevant material to be found in Locke, in the chapter I contributed to my edited volume The Cambridge Companion to Hayek, and in various academic articles.
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query reading rosenberg. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query reading rosenberg. Sort by date Show all posts
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Thursday, October 27, 2011
Reading Rosenberg, Part I
I called attention in an earlier post to my review in First Things of Alex Rosenberg’s new book The Atheist’s Guide to Reality. Here I begin a series of posts devoted to examining Rosenberg’s book in more detail than I had space for in the review. The book is worthy of such attention because Rosenberg sees more clearly than any other prominent atheist just how extreme are the implications of the scientism on which modern atheists tend to base their position. Indeed, it is amazing how similar his conclusions are to those I argue follow from scientism in chapters 5 and 6 of The Last Superstition. The difference is that whereas I claim that these consequences constitute a reductio ad absurdum of the premises that lead to them, Rosenberg regards them as “pretty obvious” and “totally unavoidable” truths about an admittedly “rough reality,” which atheists should embrace despite its roughness. How rough is it? Writes Rosenberg:
Science -- especially physics and biology -- reveals that reality is completely different from what most people think. It’s not just different from what credulous religious believers think. Science reveals that reality is stranger than even many atheists recognize. (p. ix)
and
The right answers are ones that even some scientists have not been comfortable with and have sought to avoid or water down. (p. xii)
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Reading Rosenberg, Part IX
Our long critical look at Alex Rosenberg’s The Atheist’s Guide to Reality now brings us at last to that most radical of Rosenberg’s claims -- the thesis that neither our thoughts nor anything else has any meaning whatsoever. To the reader unfamiliar with recent philosophy of mind I should emphasize that the claim is not merely that our thoughts, actions, and lives have no ultimate point or purpose, which is hardly a novel idea. It is far more bizarre than that. Consider the following two sequences of shapes: “cat” and “^\*:” We would ordinarily say that the first has meaning -- it refers to animals of the feline sort -- while the latter is a meaningless set of marks. And we would ordinarily say that while the meaning of a word like “cat” is conventional, the meaning of our thoughts about cats -- from which the meaning of the word in question derives -- is intrinsic or “built in” to the thought rather than conventional or derived. What Rosenberg is saying is that in reality, both our thoughts about cats and the sequence of shapes “cat” are as utterly meaningless as the sequence of shapes “^\*:” Neither “cat” nor any of our thoughts is any more about cats or about anything else than the sequence “^\*:” is about anything. Meaning, “aboutness,” or intentionality (to use the technical philosophical term) is an illusion. In fact, Rosenberg claims, “the brain does everything without thinking about anything at all.”
Saturday, December 10, 2011
Reading Rosenberg, Part IV
Alex Rosenberg’s dubious use of physics was the focus of the previous installment of our look at his new book The Atheist’s Guide to Reality. In this post we’ll look at his dubious biological claims. “When physics disposed of purposes,” Rosenberg tells us, “it did so for biology as well.” Now as I’ve noted before, in fact modern physics has not “disposed” of purposes at all, if what Rosenberg means by this is that physics has somehow established the metaphysical claim that the material world is devoid of objective teleological features. All it has done is to make the purely methodological move of confining itself to non-teleological descriptions of the phenomena it studies. This no more shows that teleology doesn’t exist than the fact that I am confining my comments in this post to Rosenberg’s work shows that no other philosophers exist. Moreover, the non-teleological methodology of modern physics rules out irreducibly teleological explanations in biology only if you buy into Rosenberg’s “physics or bust” brand of scientism, which he has given us no good reason to do.Friday, February 3, 2012
Reading Rosenberg, Part VII
Pressing on through Alex Rosenberg’s The Atheist’s Guide to Reality, we come to Rosenberg’s treatment of morality. Followed out consistently, Rosenberg says, scientism entails nihilism. As Rosenberg is keen to emphasize, this is not the same as moral relativism or moral skepticism. It is not the claim that moral truth is relative, or that it is real but unknowable. Nor is it the claim that everything is morally permitted. It is a far more radical and disturbing claim than any of these views. Nihilism, as Rosenberg understands it, is the view that there is no such thing as being “morally permitted” or “morally prohibited” in the first place. For there is, given Rosenberg’s scientism, no intrinsic value in the world of the sort that is necessary for morality to be intelligible. Morality -- not just commonsense or traditional morality, not just religious morality, but all morality, morality as such, including any purported secular, liberal, permissive morality -- is therefore an illusion.
Thursday, November 10, 2011
Reading Rosenberg, Part III
Continuing our look at Alex Rosenberg’s The Atheist’s Guide to Reality, we come to Rosenberg’s treatment of the question “Where did the big bang come from?” As serious students of the cosmological argument for the existence of God are aware, most of its defenders historically (including key figures like Aristotle, Aquinas, and Leibniz) are not arguing for a temporal first cause of the world. Their claim is not that God must have caused the world to begin (though some of them believe that He did, for independent reasons) but rather that He must continually be sustaining the world in existence, and would have to be doing so even if the universe had no beginning. But there is a version of the cosmological argument that does argue for a temporal first cause of the world, namely the kalām cosmological argument. Rosenberg does not explicitly address any specific version of either argument, but he is, in effect, trying to rebut them both.
Thursday, November 3, 2011
Reading Rosenberg, Part II
We saw in part I of this series that Alex Rosenberg’s new book The Atheist’s Guide to Reality is less about atheism than it is about scientism, the view that science alone gives us knowledge of reality. This is so in two respects. First, Rosenberg’s atheism is just one implication among others of his scientism, and the aim of the book is to spell out what else follows from scientism, rather than to say much in defense of atheism. Second, that it follows from his scientism is thus the only argument Rosenberg really gives for atheism. Thus, most of what he has to say ultimately rests on his scientism. If he has no good arguments for scientism, then he has no good arguments either for atheism or for most of the other, more bizarre, conclusions he defends in the book.
So, does Rosenberg have any good arguments for scientism? He does not. In fact, he has only one argument for it, and it is quite awful.
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Reading Rosenberg, Part V
In the previous installment of our look at Alex Rosenberg’s The Atheist’s Guide to Reality, we began to examine what Rosenberg has to say about biological phenomena. This time I want to take a brief detour and consider some of what Rosenberg says about the subject in his book Darwinian Reductionism. I noted that while Atheist’s Guide pushes a generally uncompromising eliminative materialist line, Rosenberg resists the “eliminativist” label where issues in the philosophy of biology are concerned, and presents his views in that field as reductionist. Darwinian Reductionism (a more serious book than Atheist’s Guide, and of independent interest) explains why.
Monday, April 30, 2012
Reading Rosenberg, Part X
And now we
reach, at long last, the end of our detailed critical look at Alex Rosenberg’s The Atheist’s Guide to Reality. In this final post I
want to examine what Rosenberg has to say about a set of philosophical
arguments he regards as “among the last serious challenges to scientism” (p. 228). The arguments in question all entail that the
realm of conscious experience -- what common sense says we know only “from
inside” (p. 238), from a point of view “somewhere behind the eyes” (p. 222) -- cannot
be accounted for in terms of neuroscience or physical science more
generally. In his treatment of these
arguments, we get Rosenberg simultaneously at his best and at his worst.
Thursday, March 8, 2012
Reading Rosenberg, Part VIII
And now, dear reader, our critical look at Alex Rosenberg’s The Atheist’s Guide to Reality brings us to the pseudoscience du jour. Wittgenstein famously said that “in psychology there are experimental methods and conceptual confusion” (Philosophical Investigations, II, xiv, p. 232). He might as well have been talking about contemporary neuroscience -- or, more precisely, about how neuroscience becomes distorted in the hands of those rich in empirical data but poor in philosophical understanding. Every week seems to bring some new sensationalistic claim to the effect that neuroscience has “shown” this or that -- that free will is an illusion, or that mindreading is possible, or that consciousness plays no role in human action -- supported by arguments notable only for the crudeness of the fallacies they commit.
Tyler Burge has given the label “neurobabble” to this modern intellectual pathology, and Raymond Tallis calls it “neurotrash,” born of “neuromania.” I’ve had reason to comment on it in earlier posts (here and here) and an extreme manifestation of the disease is criticized in the last chapter of The Last Superstition. M. R. Bennett and P. M. S. Hacker subject neurobabble to detailed and devastating criticism in their book Philosophical Foundations of Neuroscience, and Tallis does a bit of housecleaning of his own in Aping Mankind. Neurobabble is a key ingredient in Rosenberg’s scientism. Like so many other contemporary secularists, he has got the brain absolutely on the brain, and maintains that modern neuroscience vindicates some of his more outrageous metaphysical claims. In particular, he thinks that so-called “blindsight” phenomena establish that consciousness is irrelevant to our actions, and that neuroscientist Benjamin Libet’s experiments cast doubt on free will. (Jerry Coyne, in a recent article, has made similar claims about free will. What I’ll say about Rosenberg applies to Coyne as well.)
Saturday, January 28, 2012
Reading Rosenberg, Part VI
Let’s continue our detailed critical look at Alex Rosenberg’s The Atheist’s Guide to Reality. In the previous installment, we took a detour to consider how some of Rosenberg’s problematic views in the philosophy of biology are developed more systematically in his book Darwinian Reductionism. Here we return to the text of Atheist’s Guide and to the subject of religion, though we are not quite done considering what Rosenberg has to say about biological matters. For he argues that Darwinism not only makes theism unnecessary (as he falsely assumes), but is positively incompatible with it: “You can’t have your Darwinian cake and eat theism too,” insists Rosenberg. In particular, he thinks Darwinism is incompatible with the idea that God is omniscient. How so?
Friday, March 4, 2011
Scientism roundup
In several recent posts we have dealt at least indirectly with scientism, the view that the only real knowledge is scientific knowledge. Scientism is an illusion, a bizarre fantasy that makes of science something it can never be. Seemingly the paradigm of rationality, it is in fact incoherent, incapable in principle of being defended in a way consistent with its own epistemological scruples. It should go without saying that this in no way entails any criticism of science itself. For a man to acknowledge that there are many beautiful women in the world does not entail that he doesn’t think his own wife or girlfriend is beautiful. Similarly, to say that there are entirely rational and objective sources of knowledge other than science does not commit one to denying that science is a source of knowledge. Those who cannot see this are doubly deluded – like a vain and paranoid wife or girlfriend who thinks all women are far less attractive than she is and regards any suggestion to the contrary as a denial of her own beauty. Worse, like an already beautiful woman whose vanity leads her to destroy her beauty in the attempt to enhance it through plastic surgery, scientism threatens to distort and corrupt science precisely by exaggerating its significance.
Monday, July 16, 2012
Cosmological argument roundup
A year ago
today I put up a post with the title “So
you think you understand the cosmological argument?” It generated quite a bit of discussion, and
has since gotten more page views than any other post in the history of this
blog. To celebrate its first anniversary
-- and because the argument, rightly understood (as it usually isn’t), is the
most important and compelling of arguments for classical theism -- I thought a
roundup of various posts relevant to the subject might be in order.
Saturday, August 3, 2013
Links not to miss
I’ve been
out of town for most of a week. Regular
blogging will resume shortly. Until
then, some reading material from around the web.
At the Telegraph, historian Tim Stanley has
some advice for conservatives tempted to despair.
David
Oderberg’s new article “Natural Law and Rights Theory” is available
online. (Follow the link from the
Articles page at David’s website.)
Sally Satel
and Scott Lilienfeld’s Brainwashed:
The Seductive Appeal of Mindless Neuroscience is discussed over at
National Review. But Slate wonders whether the age of neuro-hype
is already over.
At The Catholic Thing, Brad
Miner is critical of what some Catholic bishops have had to say about
immigration.
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.
Saturday, July 5, 2014
Carroll on laws and causation
People have
been asking me to comment on the remarks about causation made by atheist physicist
Sean Carroll during his recent debate with William Lane
Craig on the topic
of “God and Cosmology.” (You’ll find
Craig’s own post-debate remarks here.)
It’s only fair to acknowledge at the outset that Carroll cannot justly
be accused of the anti-philosophical philistinism one finds in recent remarks
by physicists Stephen Hawking, Lawrence Krauss, and Neil deGrasse Tyson. Indeed, Carroll has recently criticized these fellow physicists
pretty harshly, and
made some useful remarks about the role of philosophy vis-à-vis physics in the
course of doing so.
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
Fifty shades of nothing
Note: The
following article is cross-posted
over at First Things.
Nothing is
all the rage of late. Physicists Stephen
Hawking and Lawrence
Krauss have devoted pop science bestsellers to trying to show how quantum
mechanics explains how the universe could arise from nothing. Their treatments were preceded by that of another
physicist, Frank Close (whose book Nothing:
A Very Short Introduction, should win a prize for Best Book Title). New Scientist magazine devoted a cover story to the subject
not too long ago, and New Yorker
contributor Jim Holt a
further book. At the more academic
end of the discussion, the medieval philosophy scholar John F. Wippel has
edited a
fine collection of new essays on the theme of why anything, rather than
nothing, exists at all. And now John
Leslie and Robert Lawrence Kuhn have published The
Mystery of Existence: Why Is There Anything At All?, a very useful
anthology of classic and contemporary readings.
Friday, April 12, 2013
Craig on theistic personalism
Someone posted the following clip at YouTube, in which William Lane Craig is asked about me and about his view of the dispute between classical theism and theistic personalism:
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, 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.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
















