Annotated Bibliography. seeking to keep the possibility of dualism alive in academic study. In this book,

Similar documents
THE TWO-DIMENSIONAL ARGUMENT AGAINST MATERIALISM AND ITS SEMANTIC PREMISE

IN THIS PAPER I will examine and criticize the arguments David

There are two explanatory gaps. Dr Tom McClelland University of Glasgow

The Qualiafications (or Lack Thereof) of Epiphenomenal Qualia

The Zimboic Hunch By Damir Mladić

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

BOOK REVIEWS. The Philosophical Review, Vol. 111, No. 4 (October 2002)

The Irreducibility of Consciousness

Searle vs. Chalmers Debate, 8/2005 with Death Monkey (Kevin Dolan)

Chapter 16 George Berkeley s Immaterialism and Subjective Idealism

A copy can be downloaded for personal non-commercial research or study, without prior permission or charge

Purple Haze: The Puzzle of Consciousness

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

The UCD community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. Your story matters!

Rule-Following and the Ontology of the Mind Abstract The problem of rule-following

The readings for the course are separated into the following two categories:

Chalmers, "Consciousness and Its Place in Nature"

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.

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

Formative Assessment: 2 x 1,500 word essays First essay due 16:00 on Friday 30 October 2015 Second essay due: 16:00 on Friday 11 December 2015

Review of David J. Chalmers Constructing the World (OUP 2012) David Chalmers burst onto the philosophical scene in the mid-1990s with his work on

Experiences Don t Sum

A Philosophical Critique of Cognitive Psychology s Definition of the Person

Churchland and Adams, et al. at an Impasse: A Way Forward?

PHILOSOPHY OF MIND (7AAN2061) SYLLABUS: SEMESTER 1

Life, Automata and the Mind-Body Problem

Are There Philosophical Conflicts Between Science & Religion? (Participant's Guide)

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

Physicalism and Conceptual Analysis * Esa Díaz-León.

Metaphysics & Consciousness. A talk by Larry Muhlstein

The Zombies Among Us. Eric T. Olson To appear in Nous.

Grounding and Analyticity. David Chalmers

Machine Consciousness, Mind & Consciousness

Review of Torin Alter and Sven Walter (eds.) Phenomenal Concepts and Phenomenal Knowledge: New Essays on Consciousness and Physicalism

On the Conceivability of Zombies

Introduction: Taking Consciousness Seriously. 1. Two Concepts of Mind I. FOUNDATIONS

Theories of the mind have been celebrating their new-found freedom to study

CRITICAL REVIEW OF AVICENNA S THEORY OF PROPHECY

THE ANTI-ZOMBIE ARGUMENT

PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT

CAUSAL-RECOGNITIONAL ACCOUNT OF PHENOMENAL CONCEPTS: AN ALTERNATIVE PHYSICALIST ATTEMPT TO SOLVE THE PROBLEM OF CONSCIOUSNESS

Minds and Machines spring The explanatory gap and Kripke s argument revisited spring 03

DECONSTRUCTING NEW WAVE MATERIALISM

the aim is to specify the structure of the world in the form of certain basic truths from which all truths can be derived. (xviii)

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

Issue 4, Special Conference Proceedings Published by the Durham University Undergraduate Philosophy Society

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

David Chalmers on Mind and Consciousness Richard Brown Forthcoming in Andrew Bailey (ed) Philosophy of Mind: The Key Thinkers.

Two Dogmas of Reductionism: On the Irreducibility of Self-Consciousness and the Impossibility of Neurophilosophy

The Possibility of Materialism

Skepticism and Internalism

Karen Bennett Princeton University not very successful early draft, March 2005

Philosophical Zombies Don t Share Our Epistemic Situation. John Curtis Wright

1/12. The A Paralogisms

Postmodal Metaphysics

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

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

Elements of Mind (EM) has two themes, one major and one minor. The major theme is

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

THE TROUBLE WITH MARY

The Alleged Hard Problem: A Pseudo Problem. Michael Prost. Fern Universität in Hagen

Mind and Body. Is mental really material?"

The Quest for Knowledge: A study of Descartes. Christopher Reynolds

PHILOSOPHY OF KNOWLEDGE & REALITY W E E K 4 : I M M A T E R I A L I S M, D U A L I S M, & T H E M I N D - B O D Y P R O B L E M

Zombies Slap Back: Why the Anti-Zombie Parody Does Not Work

Department of Philosophy

Zombie-Mary and the Blue Banana On the Compatibility of the 'Knowledge Argument' with the Argument from Modality

The Stimulus - Possible Arguments. Humans are made solely of material Minds can be instantiated in many physical forms Others?

On David Chalmers's The Conscious Mind

Supervenience & Emergentism: A Critical Study in Philosophy of Mind. Rajakishore Nath, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, India

Realism and instrumentalism

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

Property Dualism and the Knowledge Argument: Are Qualia Really a Problem for Physicalism? Ronald Planer Rutgers Univerity

PHILOSOPHY OF KNOWLEDGE & REALITY W E E K 3 D A Y 2 : I M M A T E R I A L I S M, D U A L I S M, & T H E M I N D - B O D Y P R O B L E M

The Clock without a Maker

Rejecting Jackson s Knowledge Argument with an Account of a priori Physicalism

JUST HAPPENS THINKING. ABOUT DAVID CHALMERS, PhD. DAVID CHALMERS, PhD AN INTERVIEW WITH

Tony Chadwick Essay Prize 2006 Winner Can we Save Qualia? (Thomas Nagel and the Psychophysical Nexus ) By Eileen Walker

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

BENJAMIN R. BARBER. Radical Excess & Post-Modernism Presentation By Benedetta Barnabo Cachola

Shafer-Landau's defense against Blackburn's supervenience argument

Review Tutorial (A Whirlwind Tour of Metaphysics, Epistemology and Philosophy of Religion)

PHENOMENALITY AND INTENTIONALITY WHICH EXPLAINS WHICH?: REPLY TO GERTLER

Test 3. Minds and Bodies Review

From Mechanical Brains to Philosophical Zombies

BonJour Against Materialism. Just an intellectual bandwagon?

2. Refutations can be stronger or weaker.

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

1 Hans Jonas, The Imperative of Responsibility: In Search of an Ethics for the Technological Age (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1984), 1-10.

COULD WE EXPERIENCE THE PASSAGE OF TIME? Simon Prosser

- We might, now, wonder whether the resulting concept of justification is sufficiently strong. According to BonJour, apparent rational insight is

The knowledge argument

Introductory Kant Seminar Lecture

The belief in the existence of an omniscient, omnipotent and benevolent God is inconsistent with the existence of human suffering. Discuss.

Huemer s Clarkeanism

Consciousness and explanation

C. Exam #1 comments on difficult spots; if you have questions about this, please let me know. D. Discussion of extra credit opportunities

NATURALISED JURISPRUDENCE

General Philosophy. Dr Peter Millican,, Hertford College. Lecture 4: Two Cartesian Topics

Minds and Machines spring Hill and Nagel on the appearance of contingency, contd spring 03

Transcription:

Warren 1 Koby Warren PHIL 400 Dr. Alfino 10/30/2010 Annotated Bibliography Chalmers, David John. The conscious mind: in search of a fundamental theory.! New York: Oxford University Press, 1996. Print.! This is the book is probably the most influential piece of scholarship for those seeking to keep the possibility of dualism alive in academic study. In this book, Chalmers asserts a view of dualism called property dualism. In doing so, Chalmersʼ needs to make the case that consciousness cannot be explained via reductive methods. This means that he must at least refute that consciousness doesnʼt supervene on the physical globally (93). In Chalmersʼ book, he brings up 4 major arguments for this theory. However, the most important theory for Chalmers is also his most controversial: the zombie theory.! Chalmersʼ theory of zombies is called a possible worlds argument; a philosophical method that seems quite controversial in academia today. His argument can be summed up as follows: If we can logically conceive of a world in which all physical facts hold, but there is no consciousness, then consciousness is not contingent on the physical. Chalmers claims that all this argument needs to do is demonstrate the logically conceivability of this scenario in order to make his point.! This book has appeared in numerous articles, especially those focusing on theory of mind. It seems to have kicked up quite a bit of dust especially among those that take a more materialist or naturalist approach to the theory of mind question.

Warren 2 "Supervenience (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)."Stanford Encyclopedia! of Philosophy. Stanford, n.d. Web. 7 Nov. 2010. <http://plato.stanford.edu/! Entri! This is an important article that gives some background on supervenience. According to the article, supervenience is a concept that is used in a wide variety of philosophical discourse. However, what s most relevant to my area of research is what this article says about supervenience as an argument for reduction. This I relevant to me because the big argument of theory of consciousness right now is whether it is accountable via reduction. Hence, supervenience is important in proving/disproving this.! According to the article here, in order for something to be explainable reductively, it has to be supervenient on those properties being used to explain it. Now this is were it gets abstract and kind of complicated. Basically, say you want to explain A as being reductively explainable by B. This means that in order for change to occur in A, there must be changes in B. Hence, if changes occur in the qualities which A supervenes on (B) then there must be changes in B. That may not be a completely fair explanation of supervenience given the complexity of the idea, but I believe it should suffice for the purposes of this annotated bibliography.! This is relevant to Chalmers because his zombie argument essentially proves that Consciousness is irreducible. This is because the possible world of zombies makes it logically possible for fact about consciousness (A) to change without there being a change in physical facts (B). Hence, consciousness is not supervenient on the physical and therefore is not reducible to the physical.

Warren 3 "Impossible Worlds (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)." Stanford! Encyclopedia of Philosophy. N.p., n.d. Web. 6 Nov. 2010. <http://! plato.stanford.edu/entries/impossible-worlds/>.! This article provides a comprehensive understanding of how possible worlds work as logical arguments. This method of philosophical argument appears to be a highly controversial one given the numerous affirmative and negative arguments for it. Those arguments relevant to Chalmersʼ and Dennett seem to be the arguments about how these worlds work logically.! According to the details in this argument, Chalmersʼ possible worlds theory works because it allows us to conceive of a world that doesnʼt have something. In Chalmersʼ case, a world in which there is the same physical attributes, but no consciousness. Because consciousness can be theoretically removed from the equation, then it isnʼt contingent on the physical.! This is relevant to Dennett because he uses the same method to refute Chalmerʼs case. Dennett comes up with another possible world in which the opposite of Chalmersʼ zombie is true. Thus, there is room in the system for logical contradictions among all possible worlds. Dennett, Daniel C. "The Unimagined Preposterousness of Zombies." Journal of! Consciousness Studies 2.4 (1995): 322-326. Philosopher's Index. EBSCO.! Web. 5 Nov. 2010. Philosophers ought to have dropped the zombie like a hot potato, but since they persist in their embrace, this gives me a golden opportunity to focus attention on the most seductive error in current thinking. -quoted from Dennett s The Unimagined Preposterousness of Zombies! Dennett launches what he thinks is a scathing and complete refutation of the Chalmersʼ zombie argument for property dualist. As an unapologetic materialist, Dennett

Warren 4 believes that those holding on to the zombie argument are just desperately attempting to fend off the inevitable (i.e. The scientific understanding of consciousness).! Dennett is interesting in this article because he provides another possible worlds argument that allows him to refute the claim that consciousness is something independent from physical contingency. He does this by introducing the zimbo. The zimbo is basically the opposite of Chalmersʼ zombie. In the world of zimboes, they are beings capable of second order beliefs. To Dennett, this scenario provides a counterexample that demonstrates the incoherence of Chalmersʼ zombie argument. Basically, by arguing this way, Dennett is pointing to an equally conceivable world. This world contradicts Chalmersʼ. If both can exist, then one must be false because there is an inherent contradiction. Thus according to Dennett, the zombie argument of the dualist is inherently false.! Dennett, Daniel. The Fantasy of First-Person Science. Medford: Dennett, 2001.! Print.! This is a fascinating written version of a debate. While the document is somewhat unclear, I believe that the debate was originally held between the author, Daniel Dennett, and David Chalmers at Northwestern University. The article contains the details of their argument as well as citations to supplement the topics discussed.! This article helps further develop Dennettʼs objections to Chalmersʼ position. It contains many of the same objections that Dennettʼs previous work has held. However, what is different here is the fact that Dennett focuses more on the raw implications of Chalmersʼ position for science. According to Dennett, Chalmers is advocating a switch from 3rd person science to 1st person science. Dennett dismisses this as

Warren 5 preposterous and subsequently challenges Chalmers to provide a method that would fill this gap. According to Dennett, one of the central weaknesses of Chalmersʼ position is that it fails to provide any theory for how the study of consciousness should be approached. "Consciousness (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)."Stanford Encyclopedia! of Philosophy. N.p., n.d. Web. 31 Oct. 2010. <http://plato.stanford.edu/! entries/ This is a comprehensive articles that gives a pretty good general sense of the landscape surrounding discussion of consciousness and the mind/body problem. Specifically relevant to this area of inquiry is what the article says about the explanatory gap theory of consciousness. This theory, commonly asserted by Joseph Levine, points out that there is some type of gap in the human ability to understand the relationship between the physical and phenomenal aspects of consciousness.! This theory is described as having different levels of strength. For example, a weaker explanatory gap claim will just assert that at the present moment, we lack the conceptual scientific framework in order to actually understand and explain consciousness. A stronger level of this position would argue that as humans we will never be able to explain it. Just as an insect cannot grasp mathematics, we cannot grasp those things are fundamentally beyond our capacity to understand, even through science.! This article also provides a yellow pages of sorts. It gives the names of those philosophers that support each particular view. In addition, it also points out where additional material can be found on each philosopher. For example, one particularly

Warren 6 interesting position on the theory of consciousness is Kimʼs criticism of those that attempt to account for consciousness using both non-reductive and physicalist methods. NAGEL, THOMAS. "WHAT IS IT LIKE TO BE A BAT?." Philosophical Review 83.! (1974): 435-450.Philosopher's Index. EBSCO. Web. 31 Oct. 2010.! Nagel provides an interesting account of consciousness. In this article, he essentially asserts an anti-reductionist view of consciousness. He does so by framing the problem of consciousness in a thought experiment. The question posed by this experiment is the question posed in the title of the article: What Is It Like to be a Bat?! Nagel points out that there is a fundamental subjectivity to our way of perceiving the world. This subjectivity is informed by the phenomenological way in which we view the world. He introduced the bat problem in order to demonstrate the exclusive nature of this subjectivity. Because we will never be able to understand the echo-locating way of experiencing the world, we will never be able to account for the bats consciousness on the level of true understanding.! This perspective provides a fascinating view of the mind/body problem as well. For Nagel, it would almost seem as if there is in fact a dual reality. There is the reality of the subjective experience, and the reality of the outside world. The world that the subject perceives by his/her own phenomenological means. Levin, Janet. "Consciousness Disputed." British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 48.1 (1997): 91-107. Philosopher's Index. EBSCO. Web. 31 Oct. 2010.

Warren 7 This article is a review of Chalmers, The Conscious Mind. It does an excellent job of recounting Chalmersʼ theory of logical supervenience of the consciousness. Levin points out that for Chalmersʼ a reductive explanation of consciousness is impossible due to the supervenience of consciousness of the physical. Basically, he believes that consciousness is above or on top of the physical or psychological aspects of the mind. An idea that he believes is not at odds with a naturalistic account of the world.! Levin also does an excellent job calling Chalmersʼ conclusions into question. Especially the counterintuitive nature of his proofs, including his arguments about zombies. However, Levin offers no theory of her own. She just raises questions about Chalmers. Yablo, Stephen. "Concepts and Consciousness." Philosophy and! Phenomenological Research 59.2 (1999): 455-463. Philosopher's Index.! EBSCO. Web. 31 Oct. 2010.! Yablo reviews Chalmersʼ, Consciousness Explained, and in doing so, provides a much more critical take on it that Levinʼs review. Yablo begins the review by pointing out how well written and likable the book is. However, he regrettably turns to what he finds as the fundamental flaws of the book which make it ultimately unbelievable. The flaw which he refer to is the fact that Chalmersʼ entire theory rests on the assertion that zombies are conceivable. It is Yabloʼs assertion that conceivability evidence is fallible (456).! Yablo points out that the conceivability argument cannot be confused for an argument of possibility. It would seems as if Yablo is accusing Chalmers of using the

Warren 8 term possibility as a pun. This wouldnʼt be the first time that I have seen a philosopher accuse Chalmers of this.! Webster, W R. "Human Zombies Are Metaphysically Impossible." Synthese: An! International Journal for Epistemology, Methodology and Philosophy of! Science 151.2 (2006): 297-310. Philosopher's Index. EBSCO. Web. 31 Oct.! 2010.! This article is a critical response to Chalmersʼ, The Conscious Mind. First off, Webster does an excellent job reconstructing Chalmersʼ argument for zombies. Such a good job in fact, that it is worth placing here for reference: 1. In our world, there are conscious experiences. 2. There is a logically possible world physically identical to ours, in which the positive facts consciousness in our world do not hold. 3. Therefore, the facts about consciousness are further facts about our world, over and above the physical facts. 4. So, materialism is false. Now, while there may be some aspects of this reconstruction that fail to fairly deal with Chalmersʼ view, it is still a good synopsis none the less. He does a good job at representing Chalmersʼ view that consciousness is essentially an extra fact about the physical world (298).