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Gilbert Ryle: Behaviorism and the “Ghost in the Machine”. Overview. The Dogma of the Ghost in the Machine Preliminary Problems for the DGM Category Mistakes Analytical Behaviorism. The “Official Doctrine:” The Dogma of the Ghost in the Machine. Every human being has (or is)
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Overview • The Dogma of the Ghost in the Machine • Preliminary Problems for the DGM • Category Mistakes • Analytical Behaviorism
The “Official Doctrine:” The Dogma of the Ghost in the Machine • Every human being has (or is) • A nonphysical mind • A physical body • Bodies occupy space and are subject to the mechanical laws governing objects in space. • Minds do not occupy space and are not subject to mechanical laws.
Characteristics of Mind • A person’s mental life is utterly private; the only way one mind can affect another is through the physical world. • Each mind has special access to itself, but not to any others.
The Problem of Other Minds • Each mind has unproblematic access to its own operations. • But no mind has access to the operations of another mind except by way of observed, overt, bodily behavior. • The inference from behavior to mental events cannot be empirically corroborated. • So, that inference is, at best, an article of faith.
A Preliminary Problem for the DGM • The Problem • We have “mental” concepts, and we are generally competent to apply them to one another. • To acquire these concepts, we would have to be able to confirm the correctness of our uses of the concepts, but such confirmation is impossible on the DGM. • So, DGM is unable to explain what it is supposed to explain, viz. our correct application of mentalistic concepts. • A reply: Nativism
Category Mistakes • A category mistake is the representation of facts of a certain sort as if they were of one logical type when they are really of another. • Ryle’s examples • The University • Esprit de corps • The military division • The Constitution • The Average Citizen
Analytical Behaviorism and the Cartesian Category Mistake • The Category Mistake: The DGM treats mental phenomena as if they were of the same type as ordinary physical phenomena, and must therefore posit a special forum (the non-physical mind) in which they occur. • Analytical Behaviorism: Our mental terms refer not to special, non-physical events, but to • Ways in which people behave, or • Ways in which people are disposed to behave
Review • The DGM is interactionist dualism. • Ryle thinks the DGM • Makes it impossible for us to use mentalistic concepts correctly • Is itself a category mistake • Ryle is a behaviorist