<p><span>This book evaluates the widespread preference in philosophy of mind for varieties of property dualism over other alternatives to physicalism. It takes the standard motivations for property dualism as a starting point and argues that these lead directly to nonphysical substances resembling t
The Mind-Body Problem and Metaphysics
✍ Scribed by Ralph Stefan Weir;
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Year
- 2023
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 190
- Edition
- First Edition
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
This book evaluates the widespread preference in philosophy of mind for varieties of property dualism over other alternatives to physicalism. It takes the standard motivations for property dualism as a starting point and argues that these lead directly to nonphysical substances resembling the soul of traditional metaphysics. In the first half of the book, the author clarifies what is at issue in the choice between theories that posit nonphysical properties only and those that posit nonphysical substances. The crucial question, he argues, is whether one posits nonphysical things that satisfy an Aristotelian-Cartesian independence definition of substance: nonphysical things that could exist in the absence of anything else. In the second half, the author argues that standard and Russellian monist forms of property dualism are far less plausible than we usually suppose. Most significantly, the presuppositions of one of the leading arguments for property dualism, the conceivability argument, lead by parity of reasoning to the view that conscious subjects are nonphysical substances. He concludes that if you posit nonphysical properties in response to the mind-body problem, then you should be prepared to posit nonphysical substances as well. Mainstream philosophy of mind must take nonphysical substances far more seriously than it has done for the best part of a century. The Mind-Body Problem and Metaphysics will be of interest to scholars and advanced students working in philosophy of mind, metaphysics, and the history of philosophy.
✦ Table of Contents
Cover
Endorsement Page
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction
Summary
Chapter 1: Why Does Everyone Hate the Soul?
1.1 The Mind-Body Problem and the Soul
1.2 Misconception 1: Soul-Body Dualism Is a Platonic or Cartesian Idiosyncrasy
1.3 Misconception 2: Soul-Body Dualism Is Responsible for Everything Wrong With the West
1.4 Misconception 3: Soul-Body Dualism Has Nothing Going for It Theoretically
Chapter 2: The Decline of Substance Dualism and the Substance-Property Distinction
2.1 The Fall of Substance Dualism and the Rise of Property Dualism
2.2 The Preference for Property Dualism Lacks Support
2.2.1 No Influential Argument for Preferring Property Dualism
2.2.2 Unclarity About ‘Substance’
2.3 What Is a ‘Substance’?
2.3.1 Three Characterisations of Substance: Aristotle, Descartes, Locke
2.3.2 Substance Dualism and the Independence Definition
2.4 What Is a ‘Property’?
2.4.1 Two Approaches to Properties
2.4.2 The Difference Between Property Dualism and Nonreductive Physicalism
2.4.3 Property Dualism With Concrete Properties
2.4.4 Property Dualism Without Concrete Properties
2.4.5 The Role of Properties
2.5 An Obstacle for the Independence Definition of Substance
Chapter 3: A Defence of the Independence Definition of Substance
3.1 The Metaphysical Reading and the Causal Reading
3.2 Strong and Weak Metaphysical Readings
3.3 The Property-Dependence Objection
3.3.1 The Property-Dependence Objection in Recent Philosophy
3.3.2 The Property-Dependence Objection in Descartes Scholarship
3.3.3 Responding to the Property-Dependence Objection
3.3.4 An Armstrongian Obstacle
3.4 Further Objections and Refinements
3.4.1 Four More Objections from Hoffman and Rosenkrantz
3.4.2 The Threat of Necessitism
3.4.3 Additional Criteria
Chapter 4: Four Theories of Mind and the Place of Russellian Monism
4.1 Physicalism and Idealism
4.1.1 Physicalism
4.1.2 Idealism
4.2 Substances and the Four Theories of Mind
4.2.1 The Four Theories and the Independence Definition
4.2.2 The Exhaustivity of the Four Theories of Mind
4.3 Paradigmatic Substance Dualists
4.4 Russellian Monism
4.4.1 Defining Russellian Monism
4.4.2 Russellian Monism Is Compatible With All Four Theories of Mind
4.4.3 Russellian Monism and Referential Physicalism
4.4.4 Russellian Monist Property Dualists
4.4.5 Neutral Monism
Chapter 5: The Strangeness of Property Dualism
5.1 The Knowledge Argument and the Conceivability Argument
5.2 Zombies Plus Experiences
5.3 The Symmetry Argument
5.3.1 Zombies and the Symmetry Principle
5.3.2 Relational Properties and Asymmetrical Metaphysical Complementarity
5.4 The Compresence Argument
5.4.1 The Laws of Compresence
5.4.2 The Compresence Principle
5.4.3 The Significance of the Symmetry Argument and the Compresence Argument
5.5 The Parity Argument
5.5.1 Phenomenal Properties Seem Complete
5.5.2 The Phenomenal Disembodiment Argument
5.5.3 The Parity Argument
Chapter 6: Parity of Reasoning Demands Nonphysical Substances
6.1 If Zombies Are Conceivable, Then Ghosts Are Conceivable
6.1.1 Zombies Are Conceivable
6.1.2 Ghosts Are Conceivable
6.2 Modal Rationalism and Zombies
6.2.1 The Two-Dimensional Strategy
6.2.2 The Transparent Concepts Strategy
6.3 Modal Rationalism and Ghosts
6.3.1 Modal Rationalism and Phenomenal Disembodiment
6.3.2 Premiss (i) of the Parity Argument Is True
6.4 Phenomenal Disembodiment and Nonphysical Substances
6.4.1 The Intuitive Case for Premiss (ii)
6.4.2 Descartes’s and Kripke’s Disembodiment Arguments
6.4.3 Objections to Descartes and Kripke
6.4.4 Reconciling the Objection With the Conceivability Argument
6.4.5 Is There a Threat to the Parity Argument?
6.4.6 An Optional Response
6.4.7 Modality and Duplication
6.4.8 Premiss (ii) of the Parity Argument Is True
Chapter 7: The Consequences of the Parity Argument for Nonphysical Substances
7.1 Five Reasons Why the Parity Argument Goes Unnoticed
7.2 Nonphysical Substances and the Individual Soul
7.3 The Parity Argument and Russellian Monism
7.4 The Transcendence of the Ego
7.4.1 A New Threat to the Parity Argument
7.4.2 Substrata
7.4.3 Transcendental Egos
7.4.4 The First Response to Transcendental Egos
7.4.5 The Second Response to Transcendental Egos
7.5 No Property Dualism Without the Conceivability Argument
7.5.1 The Influence of the Conceivability Argument
7.5.2 The Unity of Arguments from Consciousness
Conclusion
Appendix
Bibliography
Index
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