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.
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query thomas nagel. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query thomas nagel. Sort by date Show all posts
Friday, June 21, 2013
Monday, October 22, 2012
Nagel and his critics, Part I
Thomas
Nagel’s new book Mind
and Cosmos, which I
reviewed favorably for First Things,
has gotten some less favorable responses as well. (See Brian Leiter and Michael Weisberg’s review
in The Nation, Elliott Sober’s piece
in Boston Review, and a
blog post by Alva Noë.) The
criticism is unsurprising given the unconventional position staked out in the book,
but the critics have tried to answer Nagel’s arguments and their remarks are themselves
worthy of a response.
I’ll examine
these criticisms in some further posts in this series, but in this first
installment I want briefly to state some criticisms of my own. For while I think Mind and Cosmos is certainly philosophically important and
interesting, it has some shortcomings, even if they are perhaps relatively minor
given the book’s limited aims.
Sunday, March 17, 2013
Ferguson on Nagel
In the
cover story of the current issue of The
Weekly Standard, Andrew Ferguson reviews the controversy generated by
Thomas Nagel’s Mind and Cosmos. Along the way, he kindly makes reference to
what he calls my “dazzling six-part tour de force rebutting Nagel’s critics.” For interested readers coming over from The Weekly Standard, here are some links
to the articles to which Ferguson is referring, with brief descriptions of
their contents.
Saturday, March 23, 2013
EvolutionBlog needs better Nagel critics
EvolutionBlog’s
Jason Rosenhouse tells us in a
recent post that he hasn’t read philosopher Thomas Nagel’s Mind and Cosmos. And it seems obvious enough from his remarks
that he also hasn’t read the commentary of any of the professional philosophers
and theologians who have written about Nagel sympathetically -- such as my own
series of posts on Nagel and his critics, or Bill
Vallicella’s, or Alvin
Plantinga’s review of Nagel, or Alva
Noë’s, or John
Haldane’s, or William
Carroll’s, or J.
P. Moreland’s. What he has read is a critical review of Nagel’s
book written by a non-philosopher, and a couple of sympathetic journalistic pieces about Nagel and some of his defenders. And on that
basis he concludes that “Nagel needs better defenders.”
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.
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 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.)
Friday, December 14, 2012
Nagel and his critics, Part V
Our
look at the critics of Thomas Nagel’s Mind
and Cosmos brings us now to philosopher of science John Dupré, whose
review of the book appeared in Notre
Dame Philosophical Reviews. The review
is pretty harsh. At his kindest Dupré
says he found the book “frustrating and unconvincing.” Less kind is the remark that “as far as an
attack that might concern evolutionists, they will feel, to borrow the fine
phrase of former British minister, Dennis Healey, as if they had been savaged
by a sheep.”
The remark is not only unkind but unjust. At the beginning of his review, Dupré gives the impression that Nagel is attacking neo-Darwinian evolutionary biology per se. Dupré writes:
Darwinism, neo- or otherwise, is an account of the relations between living things past and present and of their ultimate origins, full of fascinating problems in detail, but beyond any serious doubt in general outline. This lack of doubt derives not, as Nagel sometimes insinuates, from a prior commitment to a metaphysical view -- there are theistic Darwinists as well as atheistic, naturalists and supernaturalists -- but from overwhelming evidence from a variety of sources: biogeography, the fossil record, comparative physiology and genomics, and so on. Nagel offers no arguments against any of this, and indeed states explicitly that he is not competent to do so. His complaint is that there are some explanatory tasks that he thinks evolution should perform that he thinks it can't.
The remark is not only unkind but unjust. At the beginning of his review, Dupré gives the impression that Nagel is attacking neo-Darwinian evolutionary biology per se. Dupré writes:
Darwinism, neo- or otherwise, is an account of the relations between living things past and present and of their ultimate origins, full of fascinating problems in detail, but beyond any serious doubt in general outline. This lack of doubt derives not, as Nagel sometimes insinuates, from a prior commitment to a metaphysical view -- there are theistic Darwinists as well as atheistic, naturalists and supernaturalists -- but from overwhelming evidence from a variety of sources: biogeography, the fossil record, comparative physiology and genomics, and so on. Nagel offers no arguments against any of this, and indeed states explicitly that he is not competent to do so. His complaint is that there are some explanatory tasks that he thinks evolution should perform that he thinks it can't.
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?
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, August 1, 2014
Haldane on Nagel and the Fifth Way
Next week I’ll be at the Thomistic
Seminar organized by John Haldane. Haldane’s
article “Realism,
Mind, and Evolution” appeared last year in the journal Philosophical Investigations.
Thomas
Nagel’s book Mind and Cosmos is
among the topics dealt with in the article.
As Haldane notes, Nagel entertains the possibility of a “non-materialist
naturalist” position which:
would explain the
emergence of sentient and then of rational beings on the basis of developmental
processes directed towards their production.
That is to say, it postulates principles of self-organization in matter
which lead from the physico-chemical level to the emergence of living things,
which then are further directed by some immanent laws towards the development
of consciousness, and thereafter to reason for the sake of coming to recognize
value and act in response to it, a state of affairs which is itself a value, the
good of rational life. (p. 107)
As the phrases “directed towards” and “immanent laws”
indicate, what Nagel is speculating about is a return to a broadly Aristotelian
notion of natural teleology.
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.
Tuesday, October 1, 2013
Philip Kitcher, bait-and-switcher
Here’s a
thumbnail history of philosophy and science since the early modern period, in
three stages. First, the
Aristotelian-Scholastic tradition had by the beginning of this period hammered
out a conception of the natural world that is at the same time unified and
radically anti-reductionist. It is
unified insofar as to all natural phenomena we can apply the theory of act and
potency, the hylemorphic analysis of material substances, the doctrine of the
four causes, and other components of Aristotelian
philosophy of nature. It is
radically anti-reductionist insofar as it affirms that certain divisions in
nature -- between the inorganic and the organic; between the merely
“vegetative” or non-sentient forms of life and the sensory or animal forms; and
between the merely sensory or animal forms of life and the distinctively
rational or human form -- are nevertheless differences in kind rather than
degree.
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.
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Nagel and his critics, Part X
It’s time at
long last to bring my
series of posts on the critics of Thomas Nagel’s Mind and Cosmos to a close, before it becomes a lot longer than the
book itself. There isn’t, in any event,
much more to say about the naturalist critics, most of whom raise objections
similar to those on which I’ve already commented. But I’ve long intended to finish up the
series with a post on reviewers coming at Nagel’s book from the other, theistic
direction. So let’s turn to what John
Haldane, William Carroll, Alvin Plantinga, and J. P. Moreland have said about Mind and Cosmos.
Though
objecting to materialist forms of naturalism, Nagel agrees with his naturalist
critics in rejecting theism. All of the
reviewers I will comment on in this post think he does so too glibly. Naturally, I agree with them. However, as longtime readers of this blog
know, the arguments and ideas often lumped together under the “theism” label are
by no means all of a piece. Thomists and
other Scholastics develop their conception of God and arguments for his
existence on metaphysical foundations derived from Aristotelian and Neoplatonic
philosophy. But most contemporary philosophers
of religion do not, relying instead on metaphysical assumptions deriving from
the modern empiricist and rationalist traditions which defined themselves in
opposition to Aristotelianism and Scholasticism. This is a difference that makes a difference
in the reviews of Nagel now under consideration. Haldane and Carroll, like me, are Thomists, and
their approach to Nagel reflects that fact.
But the objections raised by Moreland and Plantinga are to a significant
extent different from the sort a Thomist would make.
Sunday, January 5, 2014
Nagel on Nozick
Robert
Nozick’s Anarchy,
State, and Utopia has recently been reissued with a new Foreword by
Thomas Nagel. You can read the Foreword via
Google books. In it Nagel describes
the situation in moral and political philosophy in analytic philosophy circles
in the late 1960s. A group of thinkers
that included Nozick, Nagel, and other notables such as John Rawls and Judith
Jarvis Thomson, who participated in a discussion group called the Society for
Ethical and Legal Philosophy (SELF), reacted against certain then common
tendencies. First, as Nagel writes, they
rejected the logical positivists’ “general skepticism about value judgments,
interpreted as essentially subjective expressions of feeling.” Second, they rejected utilitarianism in favor
of “principles that limit the means that may be used to promote even the best
ends.”
Friday, June 17, 2016
Nagel v Nietzsche: Dawn of Consciousness
While we’re
on the subject of Nietzsche: The Will
to Power, which is a collection of passages on a variety of subjects from
Nietzsche’s notebooks, contains some interesting remarks on consciousness,
sensory qualities, and related topics. They
invite a “compare and contrast” with ideas which, in contemporary philosophy,
are perhaps most famously associated with Thomas Nagel. In some ways, Nietzsche seems to anticipate
and agree with points made by Nagel. In
other respects, they disagree radically.
Friday, October 5, 2012
Who wants to be an atheist?
Suppose
something like Erich von Däniken’s Chariots of the
Gods?
hypothesis turned out to be true, and the God of the Bible was really an
extraterrestrial who had impressed the Israelites with some high tech. Would you conclude: “A ha! Those atheists sure have
egg on their faces now! Turns out the Bible was right! Well, basically
right, anyway. True, God’s nature isn’t
exactly what we thought it was, but He does exist after all!” Presumably not, no more than if the God of Exodus
turned out to be Moses with an amplifier and some red fizzies he’d dumped into
the Nile. The correct conclusion to draw
in either case would not be “God exists, but He wasn’t what He seemed” but
rather “God does not exist, He only seemed to.”
Or suppose something like Frank Tipler’s Omega Point
theory turned out to be correct and the universe is destined to evolve into a
vastly powerful supercomputer (to which Tipler ascribes a kind of divinity). If you had been inclined toward atheism, do
you think you would now conclude: “Wow, turns out God does exist, or at least will
exist someday!” Or rather only: “Wow, so
this really weird gigantic supercomputer will exist someday! Cool.
But what does that have to do with God?”
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.
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.
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