Panpsychism, Neutral Monism, And the Need for a New Synthesis

No Thumbnail Available

Authors

LeWarne, Christopher

Issue Date

2020

Type

Journal Article

Language

Keywords

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

Introduction|In recent debate surrounding theory of mind, there seems to be a significant concern, for some even a disdain, regarding mainstream physicalism. This is the thesis that the entities described by physics make up all there is in the world, which is a mainstream view for good reason. Yet as a result, mind and experience are entirely reducible to physical processing as well. The concern with physicalism is that it does not seem like we can explain conscious experience—what it is like to see a forested landscape, or to smell baked bread, etc.—using just the terms provided through physics. Experience as we know it has a subjective quality: there is something that it’s like to have such first-person experiences. To use David Chalmers’ famous formulation, what we have here is the “hard problem” of consciousness: why should physical processing of the kind taking place within our brains lead to any subjective experience at all? We can understand quite well the physiology behind how, say, vision works, but many are convinced that such explanations do not suffice to explain the rich, subjective quality of the corresponding visual experience. The cause of such disagreement is called the explanatory gap—a genuine dissimilarity between what physics describes and what we all know experience to be like—and it serves as a strong motivation against physicalism and towards other options.

Description

Citation

Publisher

Creighton University

License

This material is copyrighted

Journal

Volume

Issue

PubMed ID

DOI

ISSN

EISSN

Collections