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What Are the Metaphysical Issues?. Metaphysics: questions about the nature of reality Nature of ultimate reality permanence and change appearance and reality Nature of human reality mind-body problem freedom and determinism. Metaphysical Positions. Monism Materialism Idealism Dualism.
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What Are the Metaphysical Issues? • Metaphysics: questions about the nature of reality • Nature of ultimate reality • permanence and change • appearance and reality • Nature of human reality • mind-body problem • freedom and determinism
Metaphysical Positions • Monism • Materialism • Idealism • Dualism
Conceptual Tools for Metaphysics • Simplification of complexity • Ockham's razor • Inference to the best explanation • used by both science and metaphysics
Ontology • Questions about what is most fundamentally real • Fundamental reality • that upon which everything else depends • that which cannot be created or destroyed
Metaphysical Categories • Things that are not real: eliminativist strategy • Realities reducible to more fundamental realities: reductionist strategy • Things that are fundamentally real
Plato’s Metaphysics • Nonphysical realities: Platonic Forms • Degrees of reality • Allegory of the cave
Propositions of the Mind-Body Problem • The body is a physical thing • The mind is a nonphysical thing • The mind and body interact and causally affect one another • Nonphysical things cannot causally interact with physical things • These four statements cannot all be true
Positions on the Mind-Body Problem • Mind-body dualism • Interactionism • Parallelism • Occasionalism • Physicalism • Identity theory (reductionism) • Eliminativism • Functionalism
Descartes’s Arguments for Mind-Body Dualism • Principle of the nonidentity of discernibles • Argument from doubt • Discourse on the Method • Argument from divisibility • Argument from consciousness • Meditations on First Philosophy
The Cartesian Compromise • Division of reality • Science’s authority in the physical realm • Religion’s authority in the spiritual realm • Interactionism
Physicalism: An Alternative to Dualism • Four problems of dualism: • Where is the mind-body interaction? • How does the interaction occur? • Conservation of energy? • Success of brain science?
The Positive Case for Physicalism • Correlation between mental events and brain states • Consciousness may be a by-product of low-level physical processes
Forms of Physicalism • Identity theory, or reductionism • Mental events are identical to brain events • Brain research will answer all questions about the mind • Eliminativism • Labels traditional psychological theories as folk psychology • No beliefs or desires, only brain states and processes
Functionalism • Minds are constituted by a certain pattern or relation between the parts of a system • Minds have multiple realizability • Mental states are defined in terms of their causal role (how they function)
Artificial Intelligence • Can computers think? • Turing test • Strong AI thesis: an appropriately programmed computer can think • Weak AI thesis: a computer can only simulate mental activities
Issues of Freedom and Determinism • How do nature/nurture, heredity/ environment affect us ? • consider identical twins, separated at birth • What is the origin of our actions? • What implication does determinism have for moral responsibility?
Types of Freedom • Circumstantial • ability to do what we choose • freedom from external forces • Metaphysical • free will • relates to our internal condition, not external forces • Most philosophy is concerned with metaphysical freedom
Positions on Freedom • Determinism • Libertarianism • Incompatibilism • Hard determinism • Compatibilism
Hard Determinism • Problems with libertarianism • Positive arguments for determinism • Denial of the possibility of moral responsibility
Objections to Libertarianism • Conflicts with the scientific world view • Requires the problematic notion of uncaused events • Fails to explain that we can influence other people's behavior
The Positive Case for Determinism • 1. Every event, without exception, is causally determined by prior events • 2. Human thoughts and actions are events • 3. Therefore, human thoughts and actions are, without exception, causally determined by prior events
Determinist Thinkers • Spinoza • pantheism • free will is an illusion • B.F. Skinner • radical behaviorism • reduction of all mental terms to scientific statements about behavioral probabilities
Tenets of Libertarianism • We are not determined • We do have freedom of the will • We have the capacity to be morally responsible for our actions
Objections to Determinism • Determinism makes an unwarranted generalization from a limited amount of evidence • Determinism undermines the notion of rationality • Determinism confuses methodological assumptions of science with metaphysical conclusions
Types of Antideterminism • Indeterminism • Some events are uncaused • Agency theory • Event-causation • Agent-causation • Radical existential freedom • Jean-Paul Sartre
Arguments for Libertarianism • Argument from introspection • Argument from deliberation • Argument from moral responsibility
Compatibilism • Soft determinism • We are both determined and morally responsible for our actions • Voluntary actions take place when the determining causes reside within the agent, not externally
Hierarchical Compatibilism (Frankfurt) • First-order desires • Second-order desires • Second-order volitions