Nancey Murphy, Bodies and Souls, or Spirited Bodies? Cambridge University Press, 2006, 154pp, $22.99 (pbk), ISBN

Similar documents
Nancey Murphy, Bodies and Souls, or Spirited Bodies? (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006). Pp. x Hbk, Pbk.

BEYOND CONCEPTUAL DUALISM Ontology of Consciousness, Mental Causation, and Holism in John R. Searle s Philosophy of Mind

Why I Am Not a Property Dualist By John R. Searle

Life, Automata and the Mind-Body Problem

Personal Identity and the Jehovah' s Witness View of the Resurrection

To be able to define human nature and psychological egoism. To explain how our views of human nature influence our relationships with other

Rationality in Action. By John Searle. Cambridge: MIT Press, pages, ISBN Hardback $35.00.

FAITH & reason. The Pope and Evolution Anthony Andres. Winter 2001 Vol. XXVI, No. 4

A Philosophical Critique of Cognitive Psychology s Definition of the Person

Philosophical Review.

Creighton University, Oct. 13, 2016 Midwest Area Workshop on Metaphysics, Oct. 14, 2016

METAPHYSICS. The Problem of Free Will

NEUROSCIENCE AND THE SOUL: CONTEXTUALIZED SCIENCE IN THE LIBERAL ARTS COLLEGE

SUPPORT MATERIAL FOR 'DETERMINISM AND FREE WILL ' (UNIT 2 TOPIC 5)

Mind and Body. Is mental really material?"

The Platonic tradition and concepts of Freewill

Comprehensive. Hard Determinism Compatibilism. Compatibilism. Soft Determinism. Hard Incompatibilism. Semicompatibilism. Illusionism.

Intro. The need for a philosophical vocabulary

My primary academic interest for the past few years has. Scientific Perspectives on Christian Anthropology

PHILOSOPHY OF KNOWLEDGE & REALITY W E E K 3 : N A T U R E O F R E A L I T Y

Andrea Lavazza and Howard Robinson, eds., Contemporary Dualism: A Defense, Routledge, viii pp. ISBN

Korsgaard and Non-Sentient Life ABSTRACT

Ending The Scandal. Hard Determinism Compatibilism. Soft Determinism. Hard Incompatibilism. Semicompatibilism. Illusionism.

SCIENCE AND RELIGION 3: COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE

Chalmers, "Consciousness and Its Place in Nature"

What God Could Have Made

REPLY TO BURGOS (2015)

Alzheimer's Disease Treatment Interventions and the Soul: Moral and Ethical Considerations

Session One: Identity Theory And Why It Won t Work Marianne Talbot University of Oxford 26/27th November 2011

BERKELEY, REALISM, AND DUALISM: REPLY TO HOCUTT S GEORGE BERKELEY RESURRECTED: A COMMENTARY ON BAUM S ONTOLOGY FOR BEHAVIOR ANALYSIS

Nagel, Naturalism and Theism. Todd Moody. (Saint Joseph s University, Philadelphia)

The Self and Other Minds

Dualism: What s at stake?

EPIPHENOMENALISM. Keith Campbell and Nicholas J.J. Smith. December Written for the Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

DISCUSSION THE GUISE OF A REASON

The Paradox of the stone and two concepts of omnipotence

Examining the nature of mind. Michael Daniels. A review of Understanding Consciousness by Max Velmans (Routledge, 2000).

Please remember to sign-in by scanning your badge Department of Psychiatry Grand Rounds

BOOK REVIEW: Gideon Yaffee, Manifest Activity: Thomas Reid s Theory of Action

The Incompatibility of Freedom of the Will and Anthropological Physicalism

A New Argument Against Compatibilism

Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission.

SWINBURNE ON SUBSTANCE DUALISM

Roots of Dialectical Materialism*

Department of Philosophy

According to Russell, do we know the self by acquaintance? (hint: the answer is not yes )

EMERGENTS AND THE REJECTION OF BODY-SOUL DUALISM

Phenomenal Knowledge, Dualism, and Dreams Jesse Butler, University of Central Arkansas

Merricks on the existence of human organisms

KIM JONG IL ON HAVING A CORRECT VIEWPOINT AND UNDERSTANDING OF THE JUCHE PHILOSOPHY

Lonergan on General Transcendent Knowledge. In General Transcendent Knowledge, Chapter 19 of Insight, Lonergan does several things:

Kantian Humility and Ontological Categories Sam Cowling University of Massachusetts, Amherst

From Emergence Theory to Panpsychism A Philosophical Evaluation of Nancey Murphy s Non-reductive Physicalism

Mental Causation and Ontology, S. C. Gibb, E. J. Lowe, R. D. Ingthorsson, Mar 21, 2013, Philosophy, 272 pages. This book demonstrates the importance o

DOES A BIOLOGIST NEED A SOUL?

Structure and essence: The keys to integrating spirituality and science

SWINBURNE ON SUBSTANCES, PROPERTIES, AND STRUCTURES

Evolution and Meaning. Richard Oxenberg. Suppose an infinite number of monkeys were to pound on an infinite number of

COURSE OUTLINE. Philosophy 116 (C-ID Number: PHIL 120) Ethics for Modern Life (Title: Introduction to Ethics)

Kane on. FREE WILL and DETERMINISM

Descartes to Early Psychology. Phil 255

How Not To Be A Reductivist*

Philosophy (PHILOS) Courses. Philosophy (PHILOS) 1

CHRISTIANITY AND THE NATURE OF SCIENCE J.P. MORELAND

A Framework for the Good

World without Design: The Ontological Consequences of Natural- ism , by Michael C. Rea.

ZOMBIES, EPIPHENOMENALISM, AND PERSONAL EXPLANATIONS: A TENSION IN MORELAND S ARGUMENT FROM CONSCIOUSNESS

Philosophy of Religion. Ross Arnold, Summer 2014 Lakeside institute of Theology

All philosophical debates not due to ignorance of base truths or our imperfect rationality are indeterminate.

The Resurrection of Material Beings: Recomposition, Compaction and Miracles

PHILOSOPHY. Chair: Karánn Durland (Fall 2018) and Mark Hébert (Spring 2019) Emeritus: Roderick Stewart

Psychological Egoism, Hedonism and Ethical Egoism

The Nature of Humanness Module: Philosophy Lesson 13 Some Recommended Sources The Coherence of Theism in Philosophical Foundations for a Christian

The Christian God Part I: Metaphysics

A-LEVEL RELIGIOUS STUDIES

Divine omniscience, timelessness, and the power to do otherwise

The Mind/Body Problem

Trinity & contradiction

FALL 2018 PERSON AND NEUROSCIENCE (PH 4712)

PHILOSOPHY (413) Chairperson: David Braden-Johnson, Ph.D.

God and Creation, Job 38:1-15

Various Christian scholars have

The Paradox of Free Will

PHILOSOPHY A.S. UNIT 2 PAPER, JANUARY 2009 SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO SELECTED QUESTIONS

On Some Alleged Consequences Of The Hartle-Hawking Cosmology. In [3], Quentin Smith claims that the Hartle-Hawking cosmology is inconsistent with

Chapter 5: Freedom and Determinism

Note: This is the penultimate draft of an article the final and definitive version of which is

HABERMAS ON COMPATIBILISM AND ONTOLOGICAL MONISM Some problems

William Hasker s discussion of the Thomistic doctrine of the soul

Chapter 11 CHALMERS' THEORY OF CONSCIOUSNESS. and yet non-reductive approach to consciousness. First, we will present the hard problem

Intentionality, Information and Consciousness: A Naturalistic Perspective

PHIL 480: Seminar in the History of Philosophy Building Moral Character: Neo-Confucianism and Moral Psychology

Department of Philosophy TCD. Great Philosophers. Dennett. Tom Farrell. Department of Surgical Anatomy RCSI Department of Clinical Medicine RCSI

Can Rationality Be Naturalistically Explained? Jeffrey Dunn. Abstract: Dan Chiappe and John Vervaeke (1997) conclude their article, Fodor,

Aristotle and the Soul

Free Will [The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy]

Test 3. Minds and Bodies Review

PHYSICALISM, DUALISM AND THE MIND-BODY PROBLEM. A Dissertation. Submitted to the Graduate School. of the University of Notre Dame

On the Prospects of Confined and Catholic Physicalism. Andreas Hüttemann

Transcription:

Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2006.08.03 (August 2006) http://ndpr.nd.edu/review.cfm?id=7203 Nancey Murphy, Bodies and Souls, or Spirited Bodies? Cambridge University Press, 2006, 154pp, $22.99 (pbk), ISBN 0 521 67676 2 Bodies and Souls, or Spirited Bodies? is a welcome book. Nancey Murphy defends a version of physicalism for Christians. She characterizes the physicalism that she endorses as the thesis that we are our bodies there is no additional metaphysical element such as a mind or soul or spirit. Nevertheless, biology does not tell the whole story: We are complex physical organisms, imbued with the legacy of thousands of years of culture, and, most importantly, blown by the Breath of God s Spirit; we are Spirited bodies. (ix) Murphy takes her main opponent to be a soul or mind body dualist. The book appears in Current Issues in Theology, a series of short and focused theological studies, aimed at students, Christian teachers and church professionals. As her title suggests, Murphy s book is on the nature of human persons. With no pretense to being scholarly with respect to early church history or biblical studies, the book presents brief and accessible summaries of views on the soul, on resurrection, and on the impact of science on Christian conceptions of human persons. Murphy is careful to point out that oversimplifications that are inevitable in a brief and accessible book. Although a serious student of theology will want to dig deeper, this book is a good place to start. There are four chapters. Chapter One explores Biblical and theological perspectives on human nature. Chapter Two discusses what physics, evolutionary biology and neuroscience say about human nature. Chapter Three argues against reductionism, and defends free will and morality. Chapter Four takes up human distinctiveness, divine action and presonal identity as challenges to physicalism. Although I found many of the arguments difficult to follow in detail, I shall try to summarize the main points. In Chapter One, Murphy convincingly shows that there is no such thing as the anthropology of the Bible or of the Christian tradition. Murphy argues that the fact that the Bible seems to teach dualism is largely a result of poor translations. Once the translations are repaired, it is hard to find any clear teaching on the metaphysical makeup of the person in the Bible at all. (p. 37) The Biblical authors were interested in the various dimensions of human life, in relationships, not in the philosophical question of how many parts are essential components of a human being. (p. 39) Thus, the door is open to physicalism. What difference can or should physicalism make to theology? Murphy makes some brief suggestions about theological issues like the doctrine of God, Christology and Trinity, Salvation and History, and about the unfortunate effects of dualism. The adoption of 1

physicalism may lend Christian spirituality renewed emphases on the significance of the body, and on the reign of God, in which followers of Jesus participate by active love of neighbor and in struggle for justice and peace. These are interesting ideas, worth pursuing at greater depth than is possible in a book of this compass. Chapter Two hammers more nails into the coffin of dualism. Murphy sees three periods of re appraisal of human nature prompted by science: The replacement of Aristotelian physics by modern atomistic physics; the Darwinian revolution; and recent developments in the neurosciences. Murphy begins with a brief discussion of how the atomist revolution undercut the medieval Christian world view by calling into question the Aristotelian and Thomistic idea of the soul as the form of the body. There seemed two options: Hobbes physicalism, and Descartes return to a radical dualism of mind (or soul) and body. (p. 45) In the face of modern physics, mind body dualism has seemed implausible: How could an immaterial mind cause a body to move? The Darwinian revolution highlighted the continuity between human beings and other higher animals. The transitions between species were too gradual to suppose that humans have souls but other animals do not. Murphy points to the theological roots of social Darwinism. Paley set the stage by arguing that whatever the character of the natural order, it was designed by God. Then, Malthus (an Anglican clergyman) explained that the character of the natural order was competition and starvation which then can be seen as providential. (p. 53) The cognitive neurosciences give reason to think that all the human capacities attributed to the soul can be understood as processes involving the brain, the rest of the nervous system and other bodily systems, all interacting with the socio cultural world. (p. 56) Interestingly, a number of views of Thomas Aquinas (e.g., his recognition of vis aestimativa, or an estimative power) find echoes in neuroscience (e.g., the discovery of the role of the amygdala in responding to intentions of others). Chapter Three is a defense of nonreductive physicalism. In particular, Murphy aims to show how nonreductive physicalism allows us to have free will and moral responsibility. Her strategy has two prongs. First, she argues against reductionism and for downward causation. Second, she argues that human beings are highly self directed organisms whose behavior exerts downward causal control over their neural systems, and that they can come to govern their own behavior on the basis of moral reasons. (p. 73) Murphy construes reductionism as the two fold thesis that all entities are (nothing but) arrangements of atoms and that the behavior of an entity is determined by the behavior of its parts. She takes reductionism to imply that all causation is micro causation. This allows her to argue against reductionism by examples of holistic properties (like shape) that are causally efficacious. I do not believe that reductionists would be convinced. 2

They agree that shape is causally efficacious and is a property of a whole entity, but they also believe that the shape of the whole entity is determined by the shapes and arrangement of the parts. (See, e.g., Jaegwon Kim.) Murphy defends downward causation. She does not set out her defense straightforwardly as an argument; so what follows is my best reconstruction. (pp. 78 84) First, Murphy distinguishes laws from initial or boundary conditions; then she argues that boundary conditions are themselves determined top down. Often, the boundary conditions (structural and environmental) exert downward causal efficacy by means of selection of lower level entities or causal processes according to the way they fit into higher level causal patterns. (p. 90) The laws of a system of higher level organization, where natural selection operates, are not reducible to laws of physics. The patterns of boundary conditions picked out by the special sciences have downward causal efficacy in that they can affect which causal powers of their constituents are activated or likely to be activated. (p. 83) So, she concludes, higher level processes can influence lower level processes, including brain processes. (p. 97) The self directedness needed for moral responsibility begins to emerge when an organism can use information from its environment to redirect its activity. (p. 86) Finally, more complex creatures are capable of self transcendence the ability to represent to oneself aspects of one s own cognitive processes in order to be able to evaluate them. (p.89) Self transcendence, along with language, provides the means of escaping biological determinism. (p. 91) Murphy then turns to free will and moral responsibility (the reason that we care about free will). She sets aside challenges to moral responsibility from God s foreknowledge, predestination, and social determinism on the grounds that the issue at stake for the physicalist is neurobiological determinism. (p. 103) Her aim is to show that moral responsbility is compatible with what we know about neuroscience and cognition. One of the capacities needed for moral responsibility is the ability to evaluate one s desires. Murphy comments that cognitive processes need to be understood in terms of hierarchical levels of processing such that higher cognitive levels influence lower levels, for example, by means of attention, expectancy, intention and thus lower level brain processes. (p. 97) Murphy says that if she has made the case for downward causation via selection, it makes no difference whether the laws of the bottom level are deterministic or not; higher level selective processes can operate equally well on a range of possibilities that have been produced (at the lower level) by either random or deterministic processes. (pp. 106 7, her emphasis) This claim seems to miss the point. Higher level selective causal processes may themselves be deterministic; indeed, there is no reason to think that selective processes are not deterministic. In fact, Murphy may well agree. Her characterization of free will is a compatibilist one: [W]hen a person acts on the basis of considered goals and principles, without undue 3

biological or social interference, she has become the author of her own acts and ought to be described as acting freely. (p. 108) She explicitly argues against the idea of free will as total autonomy. This makes me wonder why she thinks that neurobiological determinism is a threat to moral responsibility at all. Chapter Four takes up four issues: (i) What reason is there to think that physicalism is true? (ii) If human beings are just organisms (without souls), then in what way are human beings distinctive? (iii) How does God act in the physical world? (iv) In what does personal identity consist? (i) There is scientific support for physicalism, but not for dualism. (ii) Human beings are distinctive in being able to carry out moral duties, and to do so because they are moral duties. Also, we (sans souls) have the ability to have a relationship with God. (iii) Murphy suggests that God acts in the world at the quantum level, where there is no conflict with natural causation. Indeed, Murphy says, It is possible from a theistic perspective to interpret current physics as saying that the natural world is intrinsically incomplete and open to divine action at its most basic level. (p.131) (iv) Murphy s account of personal identity is that it is not the body qua material object that constitutes our identities, but rather the higher capacities that it enables: consciousness and memory, moral character, interpersonal relations, and, especially, relationship with God. (p 132) Taking consciousness to be an integration of various aspects of memory and awareness, Murphy proposes a combined body memoryconsciousness criterion of personal identity. (p. 136 7) Then she adds what might be called moral character to the criterion. Finally, she drops any requirement of spatiotemporal continuity for the persistence of a body. This allows that there can be a temporal interval between decay of the earthly body and what is then essentially the recreation of a new body out of different stuff. (p. 142) Thus, in a very short span, Murphy uncovers many deep and important issues that face Christians today. Now I d like to raise two questions about Murphy s project: (1) To what extent are we purely biological beings? Murphy s emphasis on neurobiology suggests that we are purely biological beings; but her view that we are complex physical organisms, imbued with the legacy of thousands of years of culture, and...blown by the Breath of God s Spirit (ix) suggests that biology deals with only part of what we are. There is a related logical question about the place of the body in Murphy s view. Murphy has a complex criterion of personal identity: a combined body memoryconsciousness plus moral character. (pp. 137 8) However, she also takes the body to be the substrate for all of the personal attributes, and she says that there is no reason in principle why a body that is numerically distinct but similar in all relevant respects could not support the same personal characteristics. (p. 4

141, my emphases) She goes on to allow for essentially the recreation of a new body out of different stuff. (p. 142) Is having this very body a necessary condition for being me or not? On the one hand, if body is part of the criterion of personal identity, then having this very body is a necessary condition for being me. On the other hand, if I could have a body that is numerically distinct from this body, then having this very body is not a necessary condition for being me. So, Murphy cannot have it both ways. (Murphy s appeal to Wiggins does not mitigate this dilemma. In the first place, Murphy does not distinguish the sortal dependency of individuation, which Wiggins endorses, from the relativity of identity, which he adamently opposes. (see p. 133) In the second place, the dilemma pops up no matter how same body is construed.) (2) Exactly what philosophical role does Murphy see for neurobiology? She suggests, for example, that one ask whether the theories of, say, Plato or Aristotle are better supported than contemporary neuroscientific theories about the sources of our capacities for cognition, emotion, and all of the other faculties that earlier theorists had attributed to the soul or mind. (p. 115) Surely Plato and Aristotle were not trying to do what neuroscience does better. Neuroscience looks for mechanisms that subserve the phenomena (like evaluating one s reasons) that Murphy discusses. But we should not conflate the mechanisms with the phenomena that they subserve. Plato and Aristotle were concerned with the philosophically interesting phenomena, not the mechanisms that subserve them. Murphy says: Neuroscience now contributes to our understanding of both morality and religious experience. (p. 66) She cites the famous case of Phineas Gage, the 19 th century workman whose brain was run through by a metal rod. Although it is interesting that brain damage to specific areas of the brain results in certain moral deficits, I do not see how this information helps us to understand morality any better than we already did. Similarly, I do not see how the fact that specific parts of the brain are activated during meditation and prayer helps us understand religious experience. (pp. 67 8) On a number of points, I think that Murphy is exactly right: (1) There is no single teaching about the metaphysics of human beings in the Bible or in Christian tradition; (2) Some nonreductive version of physicalistic anthropology is compatible with Christianity; (3) the grounds for believing in souls have been undercut by the sciences; (4) we are still morally responsible; (5) libertarian free will is incoherent; (6) the free will problem has been badly framed; (7) brain imaging will not provide evidence for or against the existence and action of God; (p. 69) (8) higher level entities exist in their own right. But defending this package of theses requires more careful attention than was always apparent in the book. For example, on p. 74, Murphy says flatly that the laws of nature are deterministic. Then, with no qualification of that statement, she says on. p. 131, that 5

the laws of quantum mechanics are only statistical. No doubt, she was referring to different (irreducible) levels, but she should have made this explicit. It is perhaps inevitable that a book of this sort will skim across the surface of many deep issues. Still, Bodies and Souls, or Spirited Bodies? is written in a comfortable conversational style and introduces many of the controversies that confront Christians today. It will be successful if, as I expect, it whets readers appetites for more. Lynne Rudder Baker University of Massachusetts Amherst 6