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Philosophy of mind
Philosophy of mind
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Philosophy of mind is a branch of philosophy that deals with the nature of the mind and its relation to the body and the external world.

The mind–body problem is a paradigmatic issue in philosophy of mind, although a number of other issues are addressed, such as the hard problem of consciousness and the nature of particular mental states.[1][2][3] Aspects of the mind that are studied include mental events, mental functions, mental properties, consciousness and its neural correlates, the ontology of the mind, the nature of cognition and of thought, and the relationship of the mind to the body.

Dualism and monism are the two central schools of thought on the mind–body problem, although nuanced views have arisen that do not fit one or the other category neatly.

  • Dualism finds its entry into Western philosophy thanks to René Descartes in the 17th century.[4] Substance dualists like Descartes argue that the mind is an independently existing substance, whereas property dualists maintain that the mind is a group of independent properties that emerge from and cannot be reduced to the brain, but that it is not a distinct substance.[5]
  • Monism is the position that mind and body are ontologically indiscernible entities, not dependent substances. This view was espoused by the 17th-century rationalist Baruch Spinoza.[6] Physicalists argue that only entities postulated by physical theory exist, and that mental processes will eventually be explained in terms of these entities as physical theory continues to evolve. Physicalists maintain various positions on the prospects of reducing mental properties to physical properties (many of whom adopt compatible forms of property dualism),[7][8][9][10][11][12] and the ontological status of such mental properties remains unclear.[11][13][14] Idealists maintain that the mind is all that exists and that the external world is either mental itself, or an illusion created by the mind. Neutral monists such as Ernst Mach and William James argue that events in the world can be thought of as either mental (psychological) or physical depending on the network of relationships into which they enter, and dual-aspect monists such as Spinoza adhere to the position that there is some other, neutral substance, and that both matter and mind are properties of this unknown substance. The most common monisms in the 20th and 21st centuries have all been variations of physicalism; these positions include behaviorism, the type identity theory, anomalous monism and functionalism.[15]

Most modern philosophers of mind adopt either a reductive physicalist or non-reductive physicalist position, maintaining in their different ways that the mind is not something separate from the body.[15] These approaches have been particularly influential in the sciences, especially in the fields of sociobiology, computer science (specifically, artificial intelligence), evolutionary psychology and the various neurosciences.[16][17][18][19] Reductive physicalists assert that all mental states and properties will eventually be explained by scientific accounts of physiological processes and states.[20][21][22] Non-reductive physicalists argue that although the mind is not a separate substance, mental properties supervene on physical properties, or that the predicates and vocabulary used in mental descriptions and explanations are indispensable, and cannot be reduced to the language and lower-level explanations of physical science.[23][24] Continued neuroscientific progress has helped to clarify some of these issues; however, they are far from being resolved. Modern philosophers of mind continue to ask how the subjective qualities and the intentionality of mental states and properties can be explained in naturalistic terms.[25][26]

The problems of physicalist theories of the mind have led some contemporary philosophers to assert that the traditional view of substance dualism should be defended. From this perspective, this theory is coherent, and problems such as "the interaction of mind and body" can be rationally resolved.[27]

Mind–body problem

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Illustration of mind–body dualism by René Descartes. Inputs are passed by the sensory organs to the pineal gland, and from there to the immaterial spirit.

The mind–body problem concerns the explanation of the relationship that exists between minds, or mental processes, and bodily states or processes.[1] The main aim of philosophers working in this area is to determine the nature of the mind and mental states/processes, and how—or even if—minds are affected by and can affect the body.

Perceptual experiences depend on stimuli that arrive at our various sensory organs from the external world, and these stimuli cause changes in our mental states, ultimately causing us to feel a sensation, which may be pleasant or unpleasant. For example, someone's desire for a slice of pizza will tend to cause that person to move his or her body in a specific manner and direction to obtain what he or she wants. The question, then, is how it can be possible for conscious experiences to arise out of a lump of gray matter endowed with nothing but electrochemical properties.[15]

A related problem is how someone's propositional attitudes (e.g. beliefs and desires) cause that individual's neurons to fire and muscles to contract. These comprise some of the puzzles that have confronted epistemologists and philosophers of mind from the time of René Descartes.[4]

Dualist solutions to the mind–body problem

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Dualism is a set of views about the relationship between mind and matter (or body). It begins with the claim that mental phenomena are, in some respects, non-physical.[5]

Mind and body (Indriya) are different functions of prakriti and so a form of property dualism may be found in the ancient Indian philosophical schools of Samkhya and Yoga (ca. 6th c. BCE). Wrongly conflating purusha ("spirit", or better, pure consciousness) with mind or manas (a development of non-conscious prakriti) while correctly distinguishing purusha and prakriti (two eternally-different ontological entities)[28] leads to the erroneous conclusion that Samkhya supports mind-body dualism, specifically substance dualism. Yet both mind and body are equally non-conscious (jaDaa) in Samkhya and, while they are different developments of prakriti, they are both made up of gunas.

In Western philosophy, the earliest discussions of dualist ideas are in the writings of Plato who suggested that humans' intelligence (a faculty of the mind or soul) could not be identified with, or explained in terms of, their physical body.[29][30] However, the best-known version of dualism is due to René Descartes (1641), and holds that the mind is a non-extended, non-physical substance, a "res cogitans".[4] Descartes was the first to clearly identify the mind with consciousness and self-awareness, and to distinguish this from the brain, which was the seat of intelligence. He was therefore the first to formulate the mind–body problem in the form in which it still exists today.[4]

Arguments for dualism

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The most frequently used argument in favor of dualism appeals to the common-sense intuition that conscious experience is distinct from inanimate matter. If asked what the mind is, the average person would usually respond by identifying it with their self, their personality, their soul, or another related entity. They would almost certainly deny that the mind simply is the brain, or vice versa, finding the idea that there is just one ontological entity at play to be too mechanistic or unintelligible.[5] Modern philosophers of mind think that these intuitions are misleading, and that critical faculties, along with empirical evidence from the sciences, should be used to examine these assumptions and determine whether there is any real basis to them.[5]

According to some,[who?] the mental and the physical seem to have quite different, and perhaps irreconcilable, properties.[31] Mental events have a subjective quality, whereas physical events do not. So, for example, one can reasonably ask what a burnt finger feels like, or what a blue sky looks like, or what nice music sounds like to a person. But it is meaningless, or at least odd, to ask what a surge in the uptake of glutamate in the dorsolateral portion of the prefrontal cortex feels like.

Philosophers of mind call the subjective aspects of mental events "qualia" or "raw feels".[31] There are qualia involved in these mental events that seem particularly difficult to reduce to anything physical. David Chalmers explains this argument by stating that we could conceivably know all the objective information about something, such as the brain states and wavelengths of light involved with seeing the color red, but still not know something fundamental about the situation – what it is like to see the color red.[32]

If consciousness (the mind) can exist independently of physical reality (the brain), one must explain how physical memories are created concerning consciousness. Dualism must therefore explain how consciousness affects physical reality. One possible explanation is that of a miracle, proposed by Arnold Geulincx and Nicolas Malebranche, where all mind–body interactions require the direct intervention of God.

Another argument that has been proposed by C. S. Lewis[33] is the Argument from Reason: if, as monism implies, all of our thoughts are the effects of physical causes, then we have no reason for assuming that they are also the consequent of a reasonable ground. Knowledge, however, is apprehended by reasoning from ground to consequent. Therefore, if monism is correct, there would be no way of knowing this—or anything else—we could not even suppose it, except by a fluke.

The zombie argument is based on a thought experiment proposed by Todd Moody, and developed by David Chalmers in his book The Conscious Mind. The basic idea is that one can imagine one's body, and therefore conceive the existence of one's body, without any conscious states being associated with this body. Chalmers' argument is that it seems possible that such a being could exist because all that is needed is that all and only the things that the physical sciences describe about a zombie must be true of it. Since none of the concepts involved in these sciences make reference to consciousness or other mental phenomena, and any physical entity can be by definition described scientifically via physics, the move from conceivability to possibility is not such a large one.[34] Others such as Dennett have argued that the notion of a philosophical zombie is an incoherent,[35] or unlikely,[36] concept. It has been argued under physicalism that one must either believe that anyone including oneself might be a zombie, or that no one can be a zombie—following from the assertion that one's own conviction about being (or not being) a zombie is a product of the physical world and is therefore no different from anyone else's. This argument has been expressed by Dennett who argues that "Zombies think they are conscious, think they have qualia, think they suffer pains—they are just 'wrong' (according to this lamentable tradition) in ways that neither they nor we could ever discover!"[35] See also the problem of other minds.

Avshalom Elitzur has described himself as a "reluctant dualist". One argument Elitzur makes in favor of dualism is an argument from bafflement. According to Elitzur, a conscious being can conceive of a P-zombie version of his/herself. However, a P-zombie cannot conceive of a version of itself that lacks corresponding qualia.[37]

Christian List argues that the existence of first-person perspectives is evidence against physicalist views of consciousness.[38] According to List, first-personal phenomenal facts cannot supervene on third-person physical facts. However, List argues that this also refutes versions of dualism that have purely third-personal metaphysics. List has proposed a model he calls the "many-worlds theory of consciousness" in order to reconcile the subjective nature of consciousness without lapsing into solipsism.[39]

Interactionist dualism

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Portrait of René Descartes by Frans Hals (1648)

Interactionist dualism, or simply interactionism, is the particular form of dualism first espoused by Descartes in the Meditations.[4] In the 20th century, its major defenders have been Karl Popper and John Carew Eccles.[40] It is the view that mental states, such as beliefs and desires, causally interact with physical states.[5]

Descartes's argument for this position can be summarized as follows: Seth has a clear and distinct idea of his mind as a thinking thing that has no spatial extension (i.e., it cannot be measured in terms of length, weight, height, and so on). He also has a clear and distinct idea of his body as something that is spatially extended, subject to quantification and not able to think. It follows that mind and body are not identical because they have radically different properties.[4]

Seth's mental states (desires, beliefs, etc.) have causal effects on his body and vice versa: A child touches a hot stove (physical event) which causes pain (mental event) and makes her yell (physical event), this in turn provokes a sense of fear and protectiveness in the caregiver (mental event), and so on.

Descartes' argument depends on the premise that what Seth believes to be "clear and distinct" ideas in his mind are necessarily true. Many contemporary philosophers doubt this.[41][42][43] For example, Joseph Agassi suggests that several scientific discoveries made since the early 20th century have undermined the idea of privileged access to one's own ideas. Freud claimed that a psychologically-trained observer can understand a person's unconscious motivations better than the person himself does. Duhem has shown that a philosopher of science can know a person's methods of discovery better than that person herself does, while Malinowski has shown that an anthropologist can know a person's customs and habits better than the person whose customs and habits they are. He also asserts that modern psychological experiments that cause people to see things that are not there provide grounds for rejecting Descartes' argument, because scientists can describe a person's perceptions better than the person themself can.[44][45]

Other forms of dualism

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Four varieties of dualism. The arrows indicate the direction of the causal interactions. Occasionalism is not shown.
Psychophysical parallelism
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Psychophysical parallelism, or simply parallelism, is the view that mind and body, while having distinct ontological statuses, do not causally influence one another. Instead, they run along parallel paths (mind events causally interact with mind events and brain events causally interact with brain events) and only seem to influence each other.[46] This view was most prominently defended by Gottfried Leibniz. Although Leibniz was an ontological monist who believed that only one type of substance, the monad, exists in the universe, and that everything is reducible to it, he nonetheless maintained that there was an important distinction between "the mental" and "the physical" in terms of causation. He held that God had arranged things in advance so that minds and bodies would be in harmony with each other. This is known as the doctrine of pre-established harmony.[47]

Occasionalism
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Occasionalism is the view espoused by Nicholas Malebranche as well as Islamic philosophers such as Abu Hamid Muhammad ibn Muhammad al-Ghazali that asserts all supposedly causal relations between physical events, or between physical and mental events, are not really causal at all. While body and mind are different substances, causes (whether mental or physical) are related to their effects by an act of God's intervention on each specific occasion.[48]

Property dualism
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Property dualism is the view that the world is constituted of one kind of substance – the physical kind – and there exist two distinct kinds of properties: physical properties and mental properties. It is the view that non-physical, mental properties (such as beliefs, desires and emotions) inhere in some physical bodies (at least, brains). Sub-varieties of property dualism include:

  1. Emergent materialism asserts that when matter is organized in the appropriate way (i.e., in the way that living human bodies are organized), mental properties emerge in a way not fully accountable for by physical laws.[5] These emergent properties have an independent ontological status and cannot be reduced to, or explained in terms of, the physical substrate from which they emerge. They are dependent on the physical properties from which they emerge, but opinions vary as to the coherence of top–down causation, that is, the causal effectiveness of such properties. A form of emergent materialism has been espoused by David Chalmers and the concept has undergone something of a renaissance in recent years,[49] but it was already suggested in the 19th century by William James.
  2. Epiphenomenalism is a doctrine first formulated by Thomas Henry Huxley.[50] It consists of the view that mental phenomena are causally ineffectual, where one or more mental states do not have any influence on physical states or mental phenomena are the effects, but not the causes, of physical phenomena. Physical events can cause other physical and mental events, but mental events cannot cause anything since they are just causally inert by-products (i.e., epiphenomena) of the physical world.[46] This view has been defended by Frank Jackson.[51]
  3. Non-reductive physicalism is the view that mental properties form a separate ontological class to physical properties: mental states (such as qualia) are not reducible to physical states. The ontological stance towards qualia in the case of non-reductive physicalism does not imply that qualia are causally inert; this is what distinguishes it from epiphenomenalism.
  4. Panpsychism is the view that all matter has a mental aspect, or, alternatively, all objects have a unified center of experience or point of view. Superficially, it seems to be a form of property dualism, since it regards everything as having both mental and physical properties. However, some panpsychists say that mechanical behaviour is derived from the primitive mentality of atoms and molecules—as are sophisticated mentality and organic behaviour, the difference being attributed to the presence or absence of complex structure in a compound object. So long as the reduction of non-mental properties to mental ones is in place, panpsychism is not a (strong) form of property dualism; otherwise it is.
Dual aspect theory
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Dual aspect theory or dual-aspect monism is the view that the mental and the physical are two aspects of, or perspectives on, the same substance. (Thus it is a mixed position, which is monistic in some respects). In modern philosophical writings, the theory's relationship to neutral monism has become somewhat ill-defined, but one proffered distinction says that whereas neutral monism allows the context of a given group of neutral elements and the relationships into which they enter to determine whether the group can be thought of as mental, physical, both, or neither, dual-aspect theory suggests that the mental and the physical are manifestations (or aspects) of some underlying substance, entity or process that is itself neither mental nor physical as normally understood. Various formulations of dual-aspect monism also require the mental and the physical to be complementary, mutually irreducible and perhaps inseparable (though distinct).[52][53][54]

Experiential dualism
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This is a philosophy of mind that regards the degrees of freedom between mental and physical well-being as not synonymous thus implying an experiential dualism between body and mind. An example of these disparate degrees of freedom is given by Allan Wallace who notes that it is "experientially apparent that one may be physically uncomfortable—for instance, while engaging in a strenuous physical workout—while mentally cheerful; conversely, one may be mentally distraught while experiencing physical comfort".[55] Experiential dualism notes that our subjective experience of merely seeing something in the physical world seems qualitatively different from mental processes like grief that comes from losing a loved one. This philosophy is a proponent of causal dualism, which is defined as the dual ability for mental states and physical states to affect one another. Mental states can cause changes in physical states and vice versa.

However, unlike cartesian dualism or some other systems, experiential dualism does not posit two fundamental substances in reality: mind and matter. Rather, experiential dualism is to be understood as a conceptual framework that gives credence to the qualitative difference between the experience of mental and physical states. Experiential dualism is accepted as the conceptual framework of Madhyamaka Buddhism.

Madhayamaka Buddhism goes further, finding fault with the monist view of physicalist philosophies of mind as well in that these generally posit matter and energy as the fundamental substance of reality. Nonetheless, this does not imply that the cartesian dualist view is correct, rather Madhyamaka regards as error any affirming view of a fundamental substance to reality.

In denying the independent self-existence of all the phenomena that make up the world of our experience, the Madhyamaka view departs from both the substance dualism of Descartes and the substance monism—namely, physicalism—that is characteristic of modern science. The physicalism propounded by many contemporary scientists seems to assert that the real world is composed of physical things-in-themselves, while all mental phenomena are regarded as mere appearances, devoid of any reality in and of themselves. Much is made of this difference between appearances and reality.[55]

Indeed, physicalism, or the idea that matter is the only fundamental substance of reality, is explicitly rejected by Buddhism.

In the Madhyamaka view, mental events are no more or less real than physical events. In terms of our common-sense experience, differences of kind do exist between physical and mental phenomena. While the former commonly have mass, location, velocity, shape, size, and numerous other physical attributes, these are not generally characteristic of mental phenomena. For example, we do not commonly conceive of the feeling of affection for another person as having mass or location. These physical attributes are no more appropriate to other mental events such as sadness, a recalled image from one's childhood, the visual perception of a rose, or consciousness of any sort. Mental phenomena are, therefore, not regarded as being physical, for the simple reason that they lack many of the attributes that are uniquely characteristic of physical phenomena. Thus, Buddhism has never adopted the physicalist principle that regards only physical things as real.[55]

Monist solutions to the mind–body problem

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In contrast to dualism, monism does not accept any fundamental divisions. The fundamentally disparate nature of reality has been central to forms of eastern philosophies for over two millennia. In Indian and Chinese philosophy, monism is integral to how experience is understood. Today, the most common forms of monism in Western philosophy are physicalist.[15] Physicalistic monism asserts that the only existing substance is physical, in some sense of that term to be clarified by our best science.[56] However, a variety of formulations (see below) are possible. Another form of monism, idealism, states that the only existing substance is mental. Although pure idealism, such as that of George Berkeley, is uncommon in contemporary Western philosophy, a more sophisticated variant called panpsychism, according to which mental experience and properties may be at the foundation of physical experience and properties, has been espoused by some philosophers such as Alfred North Whitehead[57] and David Ray Griffin.[49]

Phenomenalism is the theory that representations (or sense data) of external objects are all that exist. Such a view was briefly adopted by Bertrand Russell and many of the logical positivists during the early 20th century.[58] A third possibility is to accept the existence of a basic substance that is neither physical nor mental. The mental and physical would then both be properties of this neutral substance. Such a position was adopted by Baruch Spinoza[6] and was popularized by Ernst Mach[59] in the 19th century. This neutral monism, as it is called, resembles property dualism.

Physicalistic monisms

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Behaviorism
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Behaviorism dominated philosophy of mind for much of the 20th century, especially the first half.[15] In psychology, behaviorism developed as a reaction to the inadequacies of introspectionism.[56] Introspective reports on one's own interior mental life are not subject to careful examination for accuracy and cannot be used to form predictive generalizations. Without generalizability and the possibility of third-person examination, the behaviorists argued, psychology cannot be scientific.[56] The way out, therefore, was to eliminate the idea of an interior mental life (and hence an ontologically independent mind) altogether and focus instead on the description of observable behavior.[60]

Parallel to these developments in psychology, a philosophical behaviorism (sometimes called logical behaviorism) was developed.[56] This is characterized by a strong verificationism, which generally considers unverifiable statements about interior mental life pointless. For the behaviorist, mental states are not interior states on which one can make introspective reports. They are just descriptions of behavior or dispositions to behave in certain ways, made by third parties to explain and predict another's behavior.[61]

Philosophical behaviorism has fallen out of favor since the latter half of the 20th century, coinciding with the rise of cognitivism.[1]

Identity theory
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Type physicalism (or type-identity theory) was developed by Jack Smart[22] and Ullin Place[62] as a direct reaction to the failure of behaviorism. These philosophers reasoned that, if mental states are something material, but not behavioral, then mental states are probably identical to internal states of the brain. In very simplified terms: a mental state M is nothing other than brain state B. The mental state "desire for a cup of coffee" would thus be nothing more than the "firing of certain neurons in certain brain regions".[22]

The classic Identity theory and Anomalous Monism in contrast. For the Identity theory, every token instantiation of a single mental type corresponds (as indicated by the arrows) to a physical token of a single physical type. For anomalous monism, the token–token correspondences can fall outside of the type–type correspondences. The result is token identity.

On the other hand, even granted the above, it does not follow that identity theories of all types must be abandoned. According to token identity theories, the fact that a certain brain state is connected with only one mental state of a person does not have to mean that there is an absolute correlation between types of mental state and types of brain state. The type–token distinction can be illustrated by a simple example: the word "green" contains four types of letters (g, r, e, n) with two tokens (occurrences) of the letter e along with one each of the others. The idea of token identity is that only particular occurrences of mental events are identical with particular occurrences or tokenings of physical events.[63] Anomalous monism (see below) and most other non-reductive physicalisms are token-identity theories.[64] Despite these problems, there is a renewed interest in the type identity theory today, primarily due to the influence of Jaegwon Kim.[22]

Functionalism
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Functionalism was formulated by Hilary Putnam and Jerry Fodor as a reaction to the inadequacies of the identity theory.[24] Putnam and Fodor saw mental states in terms of an empirical computational theory of the mind.[65] At about the same time or slightly after, D.M. Armstrong and David Kellogg Lewis formulated a version of functionalism that analyzed the mental concepts of folk psychology in terms of functional roles.[66] Finally, Wittgenstein's idea of meaning as use led to a version of functionalism as a theory of meaning, further developed by Wilfrid Sellars and Gilbert Harman. Another one, psychofunctionalism, is an approach adopted by the naturalistic philosophy of mind associated with Jerry Fodor and Zenon Pylyshyn.

Mental states are characterized by their causal relations with other mental states and with sensory inputs and behavioral outputs. Functionalism abstracts away from the details of the physical implementation of a mental state by characterizing it in terms of non-mental functional properties. For example, a kidney is characterized scientifically by its functional role in filtering blood and maintaining certain chemical balances.[65]

Non-reductive physicalism
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Non-reductionist philosophers hold firmly to two essential convictions with regard to mind–body relations: 1) Physicalism is true and mental states must be physical states, but 2) All reductionist proposals are unsatisfactory: mental states cannot be reduced to behavior, brain states or functional states.[56] Hence, the question arises whether there can still be a non-reductive physicalism. Donald Davidson's anomalous monism[23] is an attempt to formulate such a physicalism. He "thinks that when one runs across what are traditionally seen as absurdities of Reason, such as akrasia or self-deception, the personal psychology framework is not to be given up in favor of the subpersonal one, but rather must be enlarged or extended so that the rationality set out by the principle of charity can be found elsewhere."[67]

Davidson uses the thesis of supervenience: mental states supervene on physical states, but are not reducible to them. "Supervenience" therefore describes a functional dependence: there can be no change in the mental without some change in the physical–causal reducibility between the mental and physical without ontological reducibility.[68]

Weak emergentism
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Weak emergentism is a form of "non-reductive physicalism" that involves a layered view of nature, with the layers arranged in terms of increasing complexity and each corresponding to its own special science. Some philosophers[who?] hold that emergent properties causally interact with more fundamental levels, while others maintain that higher-order properties simply supervene over lower levels without direct causal interaction. The latter group therefore holds a less strict, or "weaker", definition of emergentism, which can be rigorously stated as follows: a property P of composite object O is emergent if it is metaphysically impossible for another object to lack property P if that object is composed of parts with intrinsic properties identical to those in O and has those parts in an identical configuration.[citation needed]

Sometimes emergentists use the example of water having a new property when Hydrogen H and Oxygen O combine to form H2O (water). In this example there "emerges" a new property of a transparent liquid that would not have been predicted by understanding hydrogen and oxygen as gases. This is analogous to physical properties of the brain giving rise to a mental state. Emergentists try to solve the notorious mind–body gap this way. One problem for emergentism is the idea of causal closure in the world that does not allow for a mind-to-body causation.[69]

Eliminative materialism
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If one is a materialist and believes that all aspects of our common-sense psychology will find reduction to a mature cognitive neuroscience, and that non-reductive materialism is mistaken, then one can adopt a final, more radical position: eliminative materialism.

There are several varieties of eliminative materialism, but all maintain that our common-sense "folk psychology" badly misrepresents the nature of some aspect of cognition. Eliminativists such as Patricia and Paul Churchland argue that while folk psychology treats cognition as fundamentally sentence-like, the non-linguistic vector/matrix model of neural network theory or connectionism will prove to be a much more accurate account of how the brain works.[20]

The Churchlands often invoke the fate of other, erroneous popular theories and ontologies that have arisen in the course of history.[20][21] For example, Ptolemaic astronomy served to explain and roughly predict the motions of the planets for centuries, but eventually this model of the Solar System was eliminated in favor of the Copernican model. The Churchlands believe the same eliminative fate awaits the "sentence-cruncher" model of the mind in which thought and behavior are the result of manipulating sentence-like states called "propositional attitudes". Sociologist Jacy Reese Anthis argues for eliminative materialism on all faculties of mind, including consciousness, stating, "The deepest mysteries of the mind are within our reach."[70]

Mysterianism

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Some philosophers take an epistemic approach and argue that the mind–body problem is currently unsolvable, and perhaps will always remain unsolvable to human beings. This is usually termed New mysterianism. Colin McGinn holds that human beings are cognitively closed in regards to their own minds. According to McGinn human minds lack the concept-forming procedures to fully grasp how mental properties such as consciousness arise from their causal basis.[71] An example would be how an elephant is cognitively closed in regards to particle physics.

A more moderate conception has been expounded by Thomas Nagel, which holds that the mind–body problem is currently unsolvable at the present stage of scientific development and that it might take a future scientific paradigm shift or revolution to bridge the explanatory gap. Nagel posits that in the future a sort of "objective phenomenology" might be able to bridge the gap between subjective conscious experience and its physical basis.[72]

Linguistic criticism of the mind–body problem

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Each attempt to answer the mind–body problem encounters substantial problems. Some philosophers argue that this is because there is an underlying conceptual confusion.[73] These philosophers, such as Ludwig Wittgenstein and his followers in the tradition of linguistic criticism, therefore reject the problem as illusory.[74] They argue that it is an error to ask how mental and biological states fit together. Rather it should simply be accepted that human experience can be described in different ways—for instance, in a mental and in a biological vocabulary. Illusory problems arise if one tries to describe the one in terms of the other's vocabulary or if the mental vocabulary is used in the wrong contexts.[74] This is the case, for instance, if one searches for mental states of the brain. The brain is simply the wrong context for the use of mental vocabulary—the search for mental states of the brain is therefore a category error or a sort of fallacy of reasoning.[74]

Today, such a position is often adopted by interpreters of Wittgenstein such as Peter Hacker.[73] However, Hilary Putnam, the originator of functionalism, has also adopted the position that the mind–body problem is an illusory problem which should be dissolved according to the manner of Wittgenstein.[75]

Naturalism and its problems

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The thesis of physicalism is that the mind is part of the material (or physical) world. Such a position faces the problem that the mind has certain properties that no other material thing seems to possess. Physicalism must therefore explain how it is possible that these properties can nonetheless emerge from a material thing. The project of providing such an explanation is often referred to as the "naturalization of the mental".[56] Some of the crucial problems that this project attempts to resolve include the existence of qualia and the nature of intentionality.[56]

Qualia

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Many mental states seem to be experienced subjectively in different ways by different individuals.[32] And it is characteristic of a mental state that it has some experiential quality, e.g. of pain, that it hurts. However, the sensation of pain between two individuals may not be identical, since no one has a perfect way to measure how much something hurts or of describing exactly how it feels to hurt. Philosophers and scientists therefore ask where these experiences come from. The existence of cerebral events, in and of themselves, cannot explain why they are accompanied by these corresponding qualitative experiences. The puzzle of why many cerebral processes occur with an accompanying experiential aspect in consciousness seems impossible to explain.[31]

Yet it also seems to many that science will eventually have to explain such experiences.[56] This follows from an assumption about the possibility of reductive explanations. According to this view, if an attempt can be successfully made to explain a phenomenon reductively (e.g., water), then it can be explained why the phenomenon has all of its properties (e.g., fluidity, transparency).[56] In the case of mental states, this means that there needs to be an explanation of why they have the property of being experienced in a certain way.

The 20th-century German philosopher Martin Heidegger criticized the ontological assumptions underpinning such a reductive model, and claimed that it was impossible to make sense of experience in these terms. This is because, according to Heidegger, the nature of our subjective experience and its qualities is impossible to understand in terms of Cartesian "substances" that bear "properties". Another way to put this is that the very concept of qualitative experience is incoherent in terms of—or is semantically incommensurable with the concept of—substances that bear properties.[76]

This problem of explaining introspective first-person aspects of mental states and consciousness in general in terms of third-person quantitative neuroscience is called the explanatory gap.[77] There are several different views of the nature of this gap among contemporary philosophers of mind. David Chalmers and the early Frank Jackson interpret the gap as ontological in nature; that is, they maintain that qualia can never be explained by science because physicalism is false. There are two separate categories involved and one cannot be reduced to the other.[78] An alternative view is taken by philosophers such as Thomas Nagel and Colin McGinn. According to them, the gap is epistemological in nature. For Nagel, science is not yet able to explain subjective experience because it has not yet arrived at the level or kind of knowledge that is required. We are not even able to formulate the problem coherently.[32] For McGinn, on other hand, the problem is one of permanent and inherent biological limitations. We are not able to resolve the explanatory gap because the realm of subjective experiences is cognitively closed to us in the same manner that quantum physics is cognitively closed to elephants.[79] Other philosophers liquidate the gap as purely a semantic problem. This semantic problem, of course, led to the famous "Qualia Question", which is: Does Red cause Redness?

Intentionality

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John Searle—one of the most influential philosophers of mind, proponent of biological naturalism (Berkeley 2002)

Intentionality is the capacity of mental states to be directed towards (about) or be in relation with something in the external world.[26] This property of mental states entails that they have contents and semantic referents and can therefore be assigned truth values. When one tries to reduce these states to natural processes there arises a problem: natural processes are not true or false, they simply happen.[80] It would not make any sense to say that a natural process is true or false. But mental ideas or judgments are true or false, so how then can mental states (ideas or judgments) be natural processes? The possibility of assigning semantic value to ideas must mean that such ideas are about facts. Thus, for example, the idea that Herodotus was a historian refers to Herodotus and to the fact that he was a historian. If the fact is true, then the idea is true; otherwise, it is false. But where does this relation come from? In the brain, there are only electrochemical processes and these seem not to have anything to do with Herodotus.[25]

Philosophy of perception

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Philosophy of perception is concerned with the nature of perceptual experience and the status of perceptual objects, in particular how perceptual experience relates to appearances and beliefs about the world. The main contemporary views within philosophy of perception include naive realism, enactivism and representational views.[2][3][81]

Philosophy of mind and science

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A phrenological mapping of the brainphrenology was among the first attempts to correlate mental functions with specific parts of the brain although it is now widely discredited.

Humans are corporeal beings and, as such, they are subject to examination and description by the natural sciences. Since mental processes are intimately related to bodily processes (e.g., embodied cognition theory of mind), the descriptions that the natural sciences furnish of human beings play an important role in the philosophy of mind.[1] There are many scientific disciplines that study processes related to the mental. The list of such sciences includes: biology, computer science, cognitive science, cybernetics, linguistics, medicine, pharmacology, and psychology.[82]

Neurobiology

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The theoretical background of biology, as is the case with modern natural sciences in general, is fundamentally materialistic. The objects of study are, in the first place, physical processes, which are considered to be the foundations of mental activity and behavior.[83] The increasing success of biology in the explanation of mental phenomena can be seen by the absence of any empirical refutation of its fundamental presupposition: "there can be no change in the mental states of a person without a change in brain states."[82]

Within the field of neurobiology, there are many subdisciplines that are concerned with the relations between mental and physical states and processes:[83] Sensory neurophysiology investigates the relation between the processes of perception and stimulation.[84] Cognitive neuroscience studies the correlations between mental processes and neural processes.[84] Neuropsychology describes the dependence of mental faculties on specific anatomical regions of the brain.[84] Lastly, evolutionary biology studies the origins and development of the human nervous system and, in as much as this is the basis of the mind, also describes the ontogenetic and phylogenetic development of mental phenomena beginning from their most primitive stages.[82] Evolutionary biology furthermore places tight constraints on any philosophical theory of the mind, as the gene-based mechanism of natural selection does not allow any giant leaps in the development of neural complexity or neural software but only incremental steps over long time periods.[85]

Since the 1980s, sophisticated neuroimaging procedures, such as fMRI (above), have furnished increasing knowledge about the workings of the human brain, shedding light on ancient philosophical problems.

The methodological breakthroughs of the neurosciences, in particular the introduction of high-tech neuroimaging procedures, has propelled scientists toward the elaboration of increasingly ambitious research programs: one of the main goals is to describe and comprehend the neural processes which correspond to mental functions (see: neural correlate).[83] Several groups are inspired by these advances.

Neurophilosophy

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Neurophilosophy is an interdisciplinary field that examines the intersection of neuroscience and philosophy, particularly focusing on how neuroscientific findings inform and challenge traditional arguments in the philosophy of mind, offering insights into the nature of consciousness, cognition, and the mind-brain relationship.

Patricia Churchland argues for a deep integration of neuroscience and philosophy, emphasizing that understanding the mind requires grounding philosophical questions in empirical findings about the brain. Churchland challenges traditional dualistic and purely conceptual approaches to the mind, advocating for a materialistic framework where mental phenomena are understood as brain processes. She posits that philosophical theories of mind must be informed by advances in neuroscience, such as the study of neural networks, brain plasticity, and the biochemical basis of cognition and behavior. Churchland critiques the idea that introspection or purely conceptual analysis can sufficiently explain consciousness, arguing instead that empirical methods can illuminate how subjective experiences arise from neural mechanisms.[86]

An unsolved question in neuroscience and the philosophy of mind is the binding problem, which is the problem of how objects, background, and abstract or emotional features are combined into a single experience.[87] It is considered a "problem" because no complete model exists. The binding problem can be subdivided into the four areas of perception, neuroscience, cognitive science, and the philosophy of mind. It includes general considerations on coordination, the subjective unity of perception, and variable binding.[88] Another related problem is known as the boundary problem.[89] The boundary problem is essentially the inverse of the binding problem, and asks how binding stops occurring and what prevents other neurological phenomena from being included in first-person perspectives, giving first-person perspectives hard boundaries.

Computer science

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Computer science concerns itself with the automatic processing of information (or at least with physical systems of symbols to which information is assigned) by means of such things as computers.[90] From the beginning, computer programmers have been able to develop programs that permit computers to carry out tasks for which organic beings need a mind. A simple example is multiplication. It is not clear whether computers could be said to have a mind. Could they, someday, come to have what we call a mind? This question has been propelled into the forefront of much philosophical debate because of investigations in the field of artificial intelligence (AI).

Within AI, it is common to distinguish between a modest research program and a more ambitious one: this distinction was coined by John Searle in terms of a weak AI and strong AI. The exclusive objective of "weak AI", according to Searle, is the successful simulation of mental states, with no attempt to make computers become conscious or aware, etc. The objective of strong AI, on the contrary, is a computer with consciousness similar to that of human beings.[91] The program of strong AI goes back to one of the pioneers of computation Alan Turing. As an answer to the question "Can computers think?", he formulated the famous Turing test.[92] Turing believed that a computer could be said to "think" when, if placed in a room by itself next to another room that contained a human being and with the same questions being asked of both the computer and the human being by a third party human being, the computer's responses turned out to be indistinguishable from those of the human. Essentially, Turing's view of machine intelligence followed the behaviourist model of the mind—intelligence is as intelligence does. The Turing test has received many criticisms, among which the most famous is probably the Chinese room thought experiment formulated by Searle.[91]

The question about the possible sensitivity (qualia) of computers or robots still remains open. Some computer scientists believe that the specialty of AI can still make new contributions to the resolution of the "mind–body problem". They suggest that based on the reciprocal influences between software and hardware that takes place in all computers, it is possible that someday theories can be discovered that help us to understand the reciprocal influences between the human mind and the brain (wetware).[93]

Psychology

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Psychology is the science that investigates mental states directly. It uses generally empirical methods to investigate concrete mental states like joy, fear or obsessions. Psychology investigates the laws that bind these mental states to each other or with inputs and outputs to the human organism.[94]

An example of this is the psychology of perception. Scientists working in this field have discovered general principles of the perception of forms. A law of the psychology of forms says that objects that move in the same direction are perceived as related to each other.[82] This law describes a relation between visual input and mental perceptual states. However, it does not suggest anything about the nature of perceptual states. The laws discovered by psychology are compatible with all the answers to the mind–body problem already described.

Cognitive science

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Cognitive science is the interdisciplinary scientific study of the mind and its processes. It examines what cognition is, what it does, and how it works. It includes research on intelligence and behavior, especially focusing on how information is represented, processed, and transformed (in faculties such as perception, language, memory, reasoning, and emotion) within nervous systems (human or other animals) and machines (e.g. computers). Cognitive science consists of multiple research disciplines, including psychology, artificial intelligence, philosophy, neuroscience, linguistics, anthropology, sociology, and education.[95] It spans many levels of analysis, from low-level learning and decision mechanisms to high-level logic and planning; from neural circuitry to modular brain organization. Over the years, cognitive science has evolved from a representational and information processing approach to explaining the mind to embrace an embodied perspective of it. Accordingly, bodily processes play a significant role in the acquisition, development, and shaping of cognitive capabilities.[96] For instance, Rowlands (2012) argues that cognition is enactive, embodied, embedded, affective and (potentially) extended. The position is taken that the "classical sandwich" of cognition sandwiched between perception and action is artificial; cognition has to be seen as a product of a strongly coupled interaction that cannot be divided this way.[97][98]

Near-death research

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In the field of near-death research, the following phenomenon, among others, occurs: For example, during some brain operations the brain is artificially and measurably deactivated. Nevertheless, some patients report during this phase that they have perceived what is happening in their surroundings, that is, that they have had consciousness. Patients also report experiences during a cardiac arrest. There is the following problem: As soon as the brain is no longer supplied with blood and thus with oxygen after a cardiac arrest, the brain ceases its normal operation after about 15 seconds, that is, the brain falls into a state of unconsciousness.[99]

Philosophy of mind in the continental tradition

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Most of the discussion in this article has focused on one style or tradition of philosophy in modern Western culture, usually called analytic philosophy (sometimes described as Anglo-American philosophy).[100] Many other schools of thought exist, however, which are sometimes subsumed under the broad (and vague) label of continental philosophy.[100] In any case, though topics and methods here are numerous, in relation to the philosophy of mind the various schools that fall under this label (phenomenology, existentialism, etc.) can globally be seen to differ from the analytic school in that they focus less on language and logical analysis alone but also take in other forms of understanding human existence and experience. With reference specifically to the discussion of the mind, this tends to translate into attempts to grasp the concepts of thought and perceptual experience in some sense that does not merely involve the analysis of linguistic forms.[100]

Immanuel Kant's Critique of Pure Reason, first published in 1781 and presented again with major revisions in 1787, represents a significant intervention into what will later become known as the philosophy of mind. Kant's first critique is generally recognized as among the most significant works of modern philosophy in the West. Kant is a figure whose influence is marked in both continental and analytic/Anglo-American philosophy. Kant's work develops an in-depth study of transcendental consciousness, or the life of the mind as conceived through the universal categories of understanding.

In Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel's Philosophy of Mind (frequently translated as Philosophy of Spirit or Geist),[101] the third part of his Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences, Hegel discusses three distinct types of mind: the "subjective mind/spirit", the mind of an individual; the "objective mind/spirit", the mind of society and of the State; and the "Absolute mind/spirit", the position of religion, art, and philosophy. See also Hegel's The Phenomenology of Spirit. Nonetheless, Hegel's work differs radically from the style of Anglo-American philosophy of mind.

In 1896, Henri Bergson made in Matter and Memory "Essay on the relation of body and spirit" a forceful case for the ontological difference of body and mind by reducing the problem to the more definite one of memory, thus allowing for a solution built on the empirical test case of aphasia.

In modern times, the two main schools that have developed in response or opposition to this Hegelian tradition are phenomenology and existentialism. Phenomenology, founded by Edmund Husserl, focuses on the contents of the human mind (see noema) and how processes shape our experiences.[102] Existentialism, a school of thought founded upon the work of Søren Kierkegaard, focuses on Human predicament and how people deal with the situation of being alive. Existential-phenomenology represents a major branch of continental philosophy (they are not contradictory), rooted in the work of Husserl but expressed in its fullest forms in the work of Martin Heidegger, Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir and Maurice Merleau-Ponty. See Heidegger's Being and Time, Merleau-Ponty's Phenomenology of Perception, Sartre's Being and Nothingness, and Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex.

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There are countless subjects that are affected by the ideas developed in the philosophy of mind. Clear examples of this are the nature of death and its definitive character, the nature of emotion, of perception and of memory. Questions about what a person is and what his or her identity have to do with the philosophy of mind. There are two subjects that, in connection with the philosophy of the mind, have aroused special attention: free will and the self.[1]

Free will

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In the context of philosophy of mind, the problem of free will takes on renewed intensity. This is the case for materialistic determinists.[1] According to this position, natural laws completely determine the course of the material world. Mental states, and therefore the will as well, would be material states, which means human behavior and decisions would be completely determined by natural laws. Some take this reasoning a step further: people cannot determine by themselves what they want and what they do. Consequently, they are not free.[103]

This argumentation is rejected, on the one hand, by the compatibilists. Those who adopt this position suggest that the question "Are we free?" can only be answered once we have determined what the term "free" means. The opposite of "free" is not "caused" but "compelled" or "coerced". It is not appropriate to identify freedom with indetermination. A free act is one where the agent could have done otherwise if it had chosen otherwise. In this sense a person can be free even though determinism is true.[103] The most important compatibilist in the history of the philosophy was David Hume.[104] More recently,[when?] this position was defended, for example, by Daniel Dennett.[105]

On the other hand, there are also many incompatibilists who reject the argument because they believe that the will is free in a stronger sense called libertarianism.[103] These philosophers affirm the course of the world is either a) not completely determined by natural law where natural law is intercepted by physically independent agency,[106] b) determined by indeterministic natural law only, or c) determined by indeterministic natural law in line with the subjective effort of physically non-reducible agency.[107] Under Libertarianism, the will does not have to be deterministic and, therefore, it is potentially free. Critics of the second proposition (b) accuse the incompatibilists of using an incoherent concept of freedom. They argue as follows: if our will is not determined by anything, then we desire what we desire by pure chance. And if what we desire is purely accidental, we are not free. So if our will is not determined by anything, we are not free.[103]

Self

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The philosophy of mind also has important consequences for the concept of "self". If by "self" or "I" one refers to an essential, immutable nucleus of the person, some modern philosophers of mind, such as Daniel Dennett believe that no such thing exists. According to Dennett and other contemporaries, the self is considered an illusion.[108] The idea of a self as an immutable essential nucleus derives from the idea of an immaterial soul. Such an idea is unacceptable to modern philosophers with physicalist orientations and their general skepticism of the concept of "self" as postulated by David Hume, who could never catch himself not doing, thinking or feeling anything.[109] However, in the light of empirical results from developmental psychology, developmental biology and neuroscience, the idea of an essential inconstant, material nucleus—an integrated representational system distributed over changing patterns of synaptic connections—seems reasonable.[110]

One question central to the philosophy of personal identity is Benj Hellie's vertiginous question. The vertiginous question asks why, of all the subjects of experience out there, this one—the one corresponding to the human being referred to as Benj Hellie—is the one whose experiences are live? (The reader is supposed to substitute their own case for Hellie's.)[111] In other words: Why am I me and not someone else? A common response to the question is that it reduces to "Why are Hellie's experiences live from Hellie's perspective," and thus the entire question is a tautology. However, Hellie argues, through a parable, that this response leaves something out. His parable describes two situations, one reflecting a broad global constellation view of the world and everyone's phenomenal features, and one describing an embedded view from the perspective of a single subject. Caspar Hare has discussed similar ideas with the concepts of egocentric presentism[112][113] and perspectival realism.[114]

In his book I am You: The Metaphysical Foundations for Global Ethics, Daniel Kolak advocates for a philosophy he calls open individualism.[115] Open individualism states that individual personal identity is an illusion and all individual conscious minds are in reality the same being, similar to the idea of anattā in Buddhist philosophy. Kolak describes three opposing philosophical views of personal identity: closed individualism, empty individualism, and open individualism. Closed individualism is considered to be the default view of personal identity, which is that one's personal identity consists of a ray or line traveling through time, and that one has a future self. Empty individualism is another view, which is that personal identity exists, but one's "identity" only persists for an infinitesimally small amount of time, and the "you" that will exist in the future is an ontologically different being from the "you" that exists now. Similar ideas have been discussed by Derek Parfit in the book Reasons and Persons with thought experiments such as the teletransportation paradox.[116]

Thomas Nagel further discusses the philosophy of self and perspective in the book The View from Nowhere. It contrasts passive and active points of view in how humanity interacts with the world, relying either on a subjective perspective that reflects a point of view or an objective perspective that takes a more detached perspective.[117] Nagel describes the objective perspective as the "view from nowhere", one where the only valuable ideas are ones derived independently.[118]

Problems in Philosophy of Mind

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1) Is the emergent level autonomous?

2) Can constraint and constitution be causal relations for mental causation?

3) Does Downward causation violate fundamental micro-level explanation?

4) Can downward causation between two levels be generalised to other levels?

5) Is self-organization an answer to reductionism – anti-reductionism debate? Is it a paradigm shift

from substance and process philosophy?

6) What is meaning of causation in Downward Causation

7) Synchronic and diachronic identity of individual self, problem of identity - Ship of Theseus .

8) Is the reductionism – antireductionism debate same as physicalism – nonreductive physicalism .

9) How can the higher level of organization which is dependent on the lower level for its existence

have any causal impact on the lower?

10) Is causal asymmetry is violated in mental causation?

11) Is Artificial Intelligence theoretical psychology?

12) Are special sciences like psychology autonomous in their explanation or reducible to lower levels.

13) Is perception controlled form of hallucination?

14) Why is there a subjective feeling when the brain is processing information?

15) What is epiphenomenal causation?

See also

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References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The philosophy of mind is a of philosophy that explores the nature of the mind, mental states, and their relationship to the physical body, particularly focusing on questions about , thought, , and . It addresses fundamental issues such as how mental phenomena arise from or interact with physical processes in the brain and body. At the core of this field lies the mind-body problem, which seeks to explain the relationship between non-physical mental events—like thoughts, sensations, and emotions—and the material world of the body and brain. This problem gained prominence with in the 17th century, who argued for substance dualism, positing that the mind and body are fundamentally distinct substances: the mind as an immaterial, thinking entity (res cogitans) and the body as an extended, non-thinking substance (res extensa). Descartes' formulation highlighted challenges like how these substances could causally interact, influencing centuries of debate. Subsequent developments have produced several major positions. Materialism or physicalism asserts that all mental states are ultimately physical processes or properties of the brain, eliminating the need for non-physical substances. In contrast, dualism persists in various forms, maintaining a distinction between mental and physical realms. Functionalism, a prominent contemporary view, defines mental states by their functional roles—inputs, outputs, and relations to other states—analogous to software running on the hardware of the brain, as articulated by philosophers like . Other approaches include behaviorism, which reduces mental states to observable behaviors, and property dualism, which allows mental properties to emerge from physical bases without being reducible to them. In modern philosophy of mind, interdisciplinary ties to , , and have enriched the field, prompting inquiries into whether machines can possess minds or . Key ongoing debates include the —why and how subjective experience arises from physical processes—and the implications for , , and .

Historical Overview

Ancient and Medieval Perspectives

The philosophy of mind in ancient and medieval periods laid foundational concepts for understanding the (psyche or anima) as the principle of life, , and , often intertwined with cosmology and . Pre-Socratic thinkers initiated inquiries into the psyche as a dynamic entity integral to natural processes. , for instance, viewed the psyche as a vital breath () governed by the principle of , where the 's harmony arises from strife and opposites, enabling and self-knowledge through its fiery, ever-changing nature. , in contrast, proposed an atomic theory of the , positing it as a collection of fine, spherical atoms that interpenetrate the body to produce motion, sensation, and thought, with the psyche dispersing at death like physical matter. These early materialist and process-oriented views emphasized the soul's embeddedness in the physical world, challenging later notions of transcendence. Plato advanced a robust dualism, distinguishing the immortal soul from the perishable body and portraying the former as the seat of reason and true knowledge. In the , argues for the soul's immortality through cyclical arguments (opposites generate opposites, like waking from sleep) and the soul's affinity with eternal Forms, which it accesses via recollection, unhindered by bodily senses. The soul's tripartite structure—rational, spirited, and appetitive—governs ethical life, with the rational part aspiring to philosophical purification for posthumous union with the divine. This separation underscores the soul's pre-existence and , tied to moral purification, marking a shift toward metaphysical . Aristotle critiqued Platonic dualism in favor of hylomorphism, defining the soul as the "form" (eidos) or actuality of a natural body possessing life potentially, inseparable from matter except conceptually. In De Anima, he delineates the soul's capacities: vegetative (nutrition and growth), sensitive (perception and desire), and rational (intellect), with the active intellect (nous poietikos) as an eternal, divine agent abstracting universals from particulars, distinct from the passive intellect that receives forms. This integrated view posits the soul as the principle of teleological organization, enabling the body to realize its natural ends, without implying personal immortality for the lower faculties. Medieval scholasticism synthesized Aristotelian with Christian doctrine, particularly through , who affirmed the soul's subsistence as a spiritual substance capable of independent existence after bodily . In the , Aquinas argues the rational soul, as the body's , endows humans with intellect for abstracting essences from sensory data, aligning with divine creation and . This integration resolves tensions between soul-body unity and , positing the soul's incorruptibility due to its immaterial operations, while lower souls (in animals) perish with the body. Non-Western traditions offered parallel inquiries, with Indian conceiving the atman (individual soul) as identical to (ultimate reality), transcending bodily illusion through meditative realization of unity. This monistic view, as in the , equates self-knowledge with cosmic oneness, where ignorance (avidya) binds the soul to samsara (rebirth cycle). In Chinese , mental processes involved li (principle or pattern) as the rational structure ordering (vital energy), with the heart-mind (xin) harmonizing ethical cultivation and cosmic patterns without a distinct immortal soul. emphasized innate moral sprouts in xin, activated through reflection to align with heavenly li. Central debates revolved around the soul's immortality and its relation to divine creation, pitting Platonic and Christian affirmations against Aristotelian naturalism and materialist dissolutions. was defended via the soul's immateriality and rational operations, essential for , while creation debates framed the soul as directly infused by , distinct from bodily generation. These tensions foreshadowed modern dualisms, such as Descartes', by highlighting unresolved mind-body interactions.

Modern Foundations

The of the , spearheaded by figures such as and , profoundly reshaped philosophical inquiries into the mind by promoting a mechanistic worldview that reduced physical phenomena to mathematical laws and material interactions, thereby prompting thinkers to address the apparent non-mechanical nature of mental processes like thought and sensation. This shift intensified the mind-body problem, as the success of corpuscular theories in explaining bodily motion raised questions about how immaterial minds could interact with extended bodies, marking a departure from medieval scholastic integrations of and . René formalized substance dualism in his (1641), positing two distinct substances: res cogitans (thinking substance, characterized by indivisible mind or soul) and res extensa (extended substance, comprising divisible matter governed by mechanical laws). To account for their interaction, proposed the in the as the principal seat of the soul, where mind influences bodily motion and vice versa, though this mechanism remained controversial even among his contemporaries. In response to the interaction problem in Cartesian dualism, Nicolas Malebranche developed occasionalism in works like The Search After Truth (1674–1675), arguing that mind and body do not causally interact directly but achieve harmony through constant divine intervention, with serving as the sole true cause of all events. Similarly, Baruch Spinoza advanced in his Ethics (1677), rejecting dual substances in favor of a single infinite substance ( or ) whose attributes include both thought (mind) and extension (body), such that mental and physical events are parallel expressions of this underlying reality rather than separate entities. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, in his Monadology (1714), offered pre-established harmony as a solution, conceiving the universe as composed of simple, indivisible monads that are "windowless" and lack causal interaction; instead, minds and bodies appear synchronized through 's preordained design, ensuring perfect parallelism without direct influence. British empiricists further diverged from rationalist dualism by emphasizing sensory experience as the foundation of knowledge. , in (1689), described the mind at birth as a (blank slate) inscribed by sensory impressions, distinguishing primary qualities (like shape and motion, inherent to objects) from secondary qualities (like color and taste, dependent on the perceiver's mind). radicalized this into immaterialism in A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge (1710), asserting that objects exist only as perceptions (esse est percipi), thereby eliminating material substance altogether and resolving the mind-body divide by denying independent extended reality in favor of mind-dependent ideas sustained by God. These developments laid the groundwork for ongoing debates by integrating mechanistic science with introspective analysis of mental phenomena.

20th-Century Developments

The marked a significant shift in the philosophy of mind toward analytic approaches, heavily influenced by logical 's emphasis on , which sought to ground mental concepts in empirically verifiable terms. , a key figure in the , argued that psychological statements could be translated into physical language through reductive definitions, ensuring their meaningfulness by tying them to observable protocols rather than private . This verificationist framework rejected metaphysical about inner mental states, insisting that terms like "" or "" must be analyzable via behavioral or physical criteria to avoid pseudoproblems. In response to Cartesian dualism's separation of mind and body, which viewed as unverifiable, philosophers began reconceptualizing the mind within scientific discourse. A prominent development was logical behaviorism, articulated by in his 1949 book , which critiqued the "ghost in the machine" as a —treating mental processes as separate entities akin to causes rather than dispositions to behave in certain ways under specific conditions. proposed that mental terms refer to behavioral tendencies, such as "intelligent" actions in , rather than hidden inner states, thereby dissolving the mind-body problem through ordinary language analysis. This approach aligned with by making mental ascriptions publicly checkable, influencing mid-century debates on whether mental phenomena could be fully reduced to without residue. By the 1950s, type-identity theory emerged as a materialist alternative, positing that mental states are identical to specific states, building on empirical . U.T. Place's 1956 paper "Is a Process?" argued that phenomenal experiences, like after-images, are identical to neurophysiological processes, treating the identity as a contingent scientific rather than a logical necessity. Herbert Feigl's 1958 essay "The 'Mental' and the 'Physical'" further developed this by distinguishing between the intentional (conceptual) and phenomenological (qualitative) aspects of mind, proposing that raw feels correspond to neural events in a proto-identity manner. J.J.C. Smart's 1959 article "Sensations and Processes" defended a stricter topic-neutral identity, claiming that reports of sensations, such as "I see a yellowish-orange after-image," are identical to descriptions of processes like "C-fibers are firing," without implying eliminativism. These views sparked debates on versus irreducibility, with critics arguing that qualitative aspects of mind resist full physical translation, while proponents saw identity theory as advancing a unified of mind. Alan Turing's 1950 paper introduced the imitation game—later known as the —as a criterion for machine intelligence, suggesting that if a machine could mimic human conversation indistinguishably, it could be deemed to think, thereby challenging traditional notions of mind tied to biological substrates. This computability perspective influenced early discussions on whether mental processes are algorithmic, paving the way for mechanistic accounts. Ludwig Wittgenstein's (1953) complemented this by arguing against private languages, contending that mental concepts like pain acquire meaning only through public criteria and shared practices, not isolated inner experiences, thus undermining solipsistic views of the mind. Hilary Putnam's 1960 essay "Minds and Machines" provided precursors to functionalism by analogizing the mind to a , where mental states are defined by their causal roles in input-output relations rather than intrinsic physical properties, hinting at without fully developing later functionalist frameworks. These mid-century ideas collectively shifted philosophy of mind toward scientifically informed, anti-dualist analyses, setting the stage for subsequent materialist and computational paradigms. Since the late , the philosophy of mind has shifted from predominantly computational and representational paradigms toward more holistic approaches that emphasize the interplay between , body, and environment. This evolution, often termed 4E —encompassing embodied, embedded, enactive, and extended dimensions—challenges traditional views by positing that mental processes are not confined to the but distributed across bodily and environmental interactions. Building on earlier critiques of as an outdated precursor that overlooked internal mental states, contemporary trends integrate insights from , , and phenomenology to address how minds emerge from dynamic systems. A cornerstone of this shift is , which argues that cognitive processes are deeply rooted in the body's sensorimotor capacities and environmental engagements rather than abstract symbol manipulation. Pioneered in the 1990s by Francisco J. Varela, , and in their seminal work The Embodied Mind, this framework draws on and Buddhist phenomenology to portray the mind as enacted through lived, bodily experience in the world. Andy Clark further developed these ideas, emphasizing how perception and action form a coupled loop where the body and environment co-constitute cognition, as seen in his advocacy for "action-oriented representation." Similarly, the , proposed by Clark and in 1998, extends this to claim that cognitive states can incorporate external artifacts like notebooks or smartphones as part of the mind itself, provided they play a functional role akin to internal processes. , another facet, underscores that cognition arises from the organism's autonomous sensorimotor interactions, as elaborated by Thompson and Varela. In the 2010s, predictive processing theories gained prominence, framing the brain as a Bayesian inference machine that anticipates sensory inputs to minimize prediction errors, thereby integrating perception, action, and learning into a unified predictive framework. Karl Friston formalized this through the free-energy principle, positing that biological systems maintain homeostasis by actively inferring and updating models of the world. Jakob Hohwy extended this philosophically, arguing that the mind's self-modeling via Bayesian mechanisms resolves issues in perception and belief formation, influencing debates on realism and illusion in cognition. These theories have intersected with artificial consciousness debates, particularly through Giulio Tononi's Integrated Information Theory (IIT), introduced in 2004, which quantifies consciousness as the capacity of a system to integrate information (measured by Φ), applicable to both biological and artificial systems. IIT posits that consciousness arises from causal structures generating irreducible informational complexity, sparking ethical discussions on AI sentience. Feminist critiques have also reshaped contemporary discourse by challenging the mind-body dualism's gendered implications, advocating for a corporeal feminism that reconceives the body as an active, volatile site of subjectivity rather than a passive vessel. , in her 1994 book Volatile Bodies, critiques Cartesian dualism for reinforcing hierarchical oppositions that marginalize female corporeality, proposing instead a view of bodies as sexually specific and intertwined with cultural forces. This perspective highlights how dualism obscures embodied differences, urging philosophies of mind to account for corporeal variability in experiences like embodiment and agency. Post-2010 advancements in , particularly (fMRI), have profoundly influenced these philosophical debates by providing empirical mappings of neural correlates for mental states, bridging abstract with observable dynamics. fMRI studies have illuminated how distributed networks underpin and , prompting philosophers to refine theories like predictive processing against real-time data on error signaling and integration. For instance, has informed critiques of , showing how manifests in sensorimotor activations, while raising ethical questions about AI through parallels in integrated neural activity. This interdisciplinary fusion continues to drive trends toward more ecologically valid models of mind. Recent developments as of 2025 have further emphasized the , particularly debates on whether large language models exhibit or rudimentary , integrating insights from generative AI with traditional questions of and .

The Mind-Body Problem

Dualist Solutions

Dualism posits that the mind is a or set of properties distinct from the physical body, offering a solution to the mind-body problem by preserving the irreducibility of mental phenomena. This view traces its modern origins to , who argued in his (1641) that the mind and body are separable substances, as the essence of the mind is thought, which lacks extension in space. A central argument for dualism is the conceivability argument, which holds that if it is conceivable for the mind to exist without the body, then they are distinct. Descartes advanced this by claiming that he could clearly and distinctly conceive of his mind as a thinking thing independent of his body, implying their real distinction. Contemporary philosopher extended this in his 1996 book , using the thought experiment: a is a physically identical duplicate of a conscious being but lacks phenomenal ; since such are conceivable, cannot be identical to physical processes, supporting dualism. Another key argument is the knowledge argument, formulated by Frank Jackson in his 1982 paper "Epiphenomenal Qualia." It features Mary, a scientist who knows all physical facts about color vision but has never seen color herself; upon seeing red, she learns something new about the experience, indicating that mental facts are non-physical. Interactionist dualism, the most straightforward variant, asserts that mind and body causally interact, with mental states causing physical actions (e.g., deciding to raise an arm causes the arm to rise) and physical states causing mental ones (e.g., injury causes pain). However, this faces the causal closure issue: the physical world is causally closed, meaning every physical event has a sufficient physical cause, leaving no room for non-physical mental causes without violating conservation laws. To address interaction problems, proposes that mental states are caused by physical brain processes but exert no causal influence on the physical world, functioning like steam from an engine—epiphenomenal byproducts. This view was articulated by Thomas Huxley in his 1874 lecture "On the Hypothesis That Animals Are Automata, and Its History," where he likened to a byproduct of neural activity without downward causation. Occasionalism resolves interaction by denying direct causation between mind and body, positing that is the sole cause who intervenes on every "occasion" of apparent mind-body , such as producing bodily motion when a mental decision occurs. This doctrine, developed by Cartesians like in the , ensures no violation of by attributing all efficacy to divine action. Parallelism, advanced by , maintains that mind and body do not interact but run in pre-established harmony, like two synchronized clocks set by at creation; mental and physical states evolve in perfect correlation without causal influence. detailed this in his (1714), arguing that monads (simple substances) have no "windows" for interaction, yet their internal principles ensure harmony. Property dualism, a modern refinement, holds that while there is only one kind of substance (physical), it instantiates both physical and irreducibly mental properties, allowing mental states to supervene on but not reduce to physical ones. defends this in (1996), arguing that phenomenal properties (e.g., the "what it's like" of experience) are fundamental and non-reducible, even if token mental events are identical to physical events. Dualism encounters significant objections, including overdetermination: if mental causes produce physical effects, those effects would have both mental and physical causes, leading to unnecessary duplication since physical causes alone suffice. Philosopher articulates the causal pairing problem in his 2005 book Physicalism, or Something Near Enough, arguing that without spatial or nomological relations to pair specific mental events with specific physical effects (e.g., which soul causes which arm to move), systematic causation between non-physical minds and physical bodies is incoherent.

Monist Solutions

Monist solutions to the mind-body problem posit that mind and body are ultimately manifestations of a single underlying substance or , rejecting the dualist separation of mental and physical realms as two distinct entities. This approach addresses longstanding issues in dualism, such as the problem of how non-physical minds could causally interact with physical bodies. Within , physicalist variants reduce or eliminate mental phenomena in favor of physical processes, while idealist variants prioritize mind as fundamental. Materialist monism, often synonymous with , holds that mental states are identical to or realized by physical states, typically in the . Reductive physicalism argues that mental properties can be reduced to brain functions through theoretical identifications, allowing mental concepts to be analyzed as physical ones without loss of . For instance, philosopher David Lewis contended that mental states are contingently identical to neural states, enabling a realist account where minds are fully explicable via physical science. In contrast, goes further by claiming that common-sense folk —our everyday theory of beliefs, desires, and intentions—is fundamentally false and destined for elimination, much like outdated theories such as phlogiston in chemistry. advanced this view, arguing that will replace folk psychology with a more accurate, neurocomputational framework that discards irredeemable mentalistic categories. Idealist monism reverses the priority, asserting that reality is fundamentally mental and that physical objects are constructs or appearances within minds. George Berkeley's subjective , encapsulated in "esse est percipi" (to be is to be perceived), maintained that objects exist only as ideas in perceiving minds, sustained ultimately by God's infinite perception to ensure continuity. Modern extensions draw tentative links to , where observer effects suggest plays a role in physical reality; proposed that the mind's role in quantum measurement collapses the wave function, hinting at by implying as ontologically primitive; however, Wigner later abandoned this view in the 1980s, favoring a more conventional interpretation to avoid . Anomalous monism, a non-reductive physicalist variant, holds that s are identical to physical events but cannot be subsumed under strict psychophysical laws due to the holistic and interpretive nature of mental ascriptions. Donald Davidson introduced this position to reconcile mental causation with the nomological character of physical laws, arguing that while every causes physical events (and vice versa), no token mental-physical identity admits of strict laws bridging the mental and physical domains. A key argument supporting physicalist monism is the principle of causal closure of the physical domain, which states that every physical event has a sufficient physical cause, leaving no room for non-physical mental causes without violating scientific completeness. This bolsters by implying that mental events must be physical to participate in causation. In , the argument from illusion challenges materialist assumptions by noting that perceptual errors (e.g., bent sticks in water) reveal that immediate objects of are mind-dependent ideas, not independent , thus undermining the reality of unperceived physical substances. Neutral monism offers a variant where neither mind nor matter is fundamental; instead, both are constructs from a neutral underlying "stuff," such as events or sensations. developed this view, positing that the world consists of neutral entities—like perspectival senses or events—that can be organized into either mental or physical complexes depending on context, avoiding the of strict or .

Alternative Resolutions

Mysterianism posits that the mind-body problem is fundamentally unsolvable by due to inherent limitations in our , a view advanced by in his 1991 book The Problem of Consciousness. McGinn introduces the of "cognitive closure," arguing that while arises naturally from physical processes, minds lack the innate faculties to comprehend the precise mechanism linking the two, rendering the problem intractable despite its objective solvability. This epistemological barrier is illustrated by phenomena like , the subjective qualities of experience, which McGinn sees as emblematic of our cognitive limits. Linguistic critiques offer another alternative by dissolving the mind-body problem as a pseudo-issue stemming from misuse of language. , in his 1949 work , diagnoses the problem as a "category mistake," where mental states are erroneously treated as entities akin to physical objects, rather than dispositions or behavioral tendencies observable in everyday actions. Similarly, Ludwig Wittgenstein's (1953) employs the private language argument to challenge the idea of inner mental states accessible only to the individual, suggesting that meaning and understanding derive from public linguistic practices, thereby eliminating the need for a separate mental realm. Emergentism provides a metaphysical resolution by proposing that mental properties arise from the complex organization of physical systems without being reducible to their components. C.D. Broad's 1925 book The Mind and Its Place in Nature defends this view, distinguishing emergent properties—such as —that possess novel causal powers not predictable from lower-level physical laws alone. Contemporary extends emergentism, maintaining that mental states supervene on physical bases while retaining irreducibly higher-level autonomy, as explored in Robert Van Gulick's analysis of reduction and emergence in the mind-body debate. Panpsychism counters emergence challenges by attributing as a fundamental property inherent to all matter, avoiding the of how non-conscious elements produce mind. Goff's 2019 book Galileo's Error: Foundations for a New Science of Consciousness revives this position, arguing that aligns with naturalism by positing proto-conscious properties in basic particles, which combine to form unified human experience without violating physical laws. These alternatives spark debates over whether resolutions are primarily epistemological—highlighting limits in human inquiry—or metaphysical, reconfiguring reality's structure—and whether they undermine strict naturalism by invoking unobservable closures or intrinsic mental features. McGinn's mysterianism, for instance, preserves naturalism ontologically while conceding epistemic bounds, contrasting with panpsychism's bolder revision of fundamental .

Consciousness and Subjective Experience

Defining Consciousness

Consciousness has been a central concept in philosophy of mind, often characterized as the subjective aspect of mental life that distinguishes experiencing subjects from mere information processors. Philosophers have proposed various definitions, emphasizing its role in , awareness, and . A foundational historical account comes from , who in his Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1690) defined consciousness as "the of what passes in a man's own mind," linking it directly to internal sensory and reflective processes. This view shifted over time toward modern functional roles, where is understood not just as passive but as enabling adaptive behaviors, reasoning, and reportability in cognitive systems. A key distinction in contemporary definitions separates phenomenal consciousness from access consciousness. Phenomenal consciousness refers to the "what-it-is-like" quality of subjective experience, such as the felt redness of seeing a or the pain of a , independent of its utility for thought or action. In contrast, access consciousness involves mental states that are available for use in reasoning, speech, and guiding behavior, often equated with reportability or integration into central cognitive processes. This bifurcation, introduced by in 1995, highlights how the two can dissociate, as in cases where subjects report experiences without full cognitive access or vice versa. Further distinctions clarify the scope of consciousness. Creature consciousness applies to whole organisms that are awake and responsive to their environment, as opposed to state consciousness, which attributes to specific mental states or episodes within that . Similarly, transitive consciousness denotes of an object or state (e.g., being conscious of a ), while intransitive consciousness means simply being conscious or alert, without specifying an object. These categories allow for nuanced analyses, such as a creature being intransitively conscious yet not transitively aware of particular stimuli. Minimalist definitions focus on the irreducible subjective character of experience. , in his 1974 essay "What Is It Like to Be a Bat?", argued that an has conscious mental states there is something it is like to be that from its perspective, emphasizing the first-personal, experiential over behavioral or functional descriptions. This approach underscores the challenge of objective accounts capturing subjective phenomena. Complementing this, in (1890) described consciousness as a continuous " of thought," a personal, selective flow of sensations, images, and feelings that defies reduction to discrete units, highlighting its temporal and unified nature. Self-awareness distinctions further refine these definitions, separating basic creature-level awareness from higher-order reflective . Higher-order theories, in overview, posit that a becomes through a meta-representation or thought about that state itself, such as monitoring one's own perceptions, thereby enabling and self-knowledge without requiring full phenomenal detail in every case. These concepts collectively frame as multifaceted, bridging historical with modern analytical precision, though debates persist on their interrelations.

The Hard Problem and Explanatory Gap

In philosophy of mind, the hard problem of consciousness refers to the challenge of explaining why and how physical processes in the brain give rise to subjective experiences, or qualia. Philosopher David Chalmers introduced this distinction in 1995, separating the "easy problems" of consciousness—which involve explaining cognitive functions such as the ability to discriminate, integrate information, or report mental states— from the "hard problem," which concerns the fact that these processes are accompanied by phenomenal experience itself. Chalmers argues that while scientific methods can address the easy problems through empirical investigation, the hard problem resists reduction to physical explanations because it involves the "why" of experience rather than mere mechanisms. The , a related , highlights the apparent impossibility of bridging physical descriptions of the with the nature of conscious . Joseph coined the term in , pointing out that even a complete physical account of mental states, such as identifying with the firing of C-fibers, leaves unexplained why such processes feel like anything at all. used the conceivability of a physical duplicate of a conscious being lacking phenomenal qualities to illustrate this gap, suggesting it reveals a fundamental divide between objective and subjective reality. Several s underscore these issues. Chalmers' argument posits beings physically identical to humans but without , conceivable if is false, thereby supporting the hard problem by showing that functional duplicates need not entail experience. Similarly, the , as discussed by Chalmers, imagines two individuals with identical behavioral responses to colors but reversed (e.g., one sees where the other sees ), demonstrating that physical or functional descriptions cannot capture the intrinsic nature of experience. Frank Jackson's features Mary, a who knows all physical facts about color but learns something new upon experiencing for the first time, implying that phenomenal exceeds physical . Debates persist over whether this gap is epistemic—arising from human limitations in understanding—or ontological, indicating a real metaphysical divide. Chalmers affirms its ontological status, arguing it challenges physicalist accounts of mind. In contrast, denies the hard problem's legitimacy, viewing it as a conceptual confusion rather than a substantive issue, and claims that explaining all functional aspects of eliminates any .

Theories of Consciousness

Theories of consciousness in philosophy of mind aim to account for the subjective, phenomenal aspects of , often targeting the challenge of explaining why certain physical processes are accompanied by or "what it is like" to have them. These theories generally divide into reductive approaches, which seek to explain in terms of non-mental properties like representation or information processing, and non-reductive ones, which posit as a fundamental feature not fully reducible to physical structures. Representationalist theories, for instance, hold that phenomenal consists in the representation of certain properties in the world, such that the qualitative feel of an is identical to its representational content. Michael Tye's PANIC theory (Poised, Abstract, Non-conceptual, Intentional Content) exemplifies this view, arguing that the phenomenal character of visual experiences, such as the redness of an apple, is exhausted by the way those experiences non-conceptually represent objective properties like reflectance spectra. Tye maintains that this representational content is poised for use in rational control of action and abstract in tracking higher-order features, thereby dissolving the by tying subjectivity directly to worldly properties rather than intrinsic mental qualities. Similarly, Sydney Shoemaker develops a "better kind of representationalism" where phenomenal properties are higher-order representations of first-order states, emphasizing that the content of involves self-representational aspects that capture the intrinsic nature of experiences. Shoemaker contends that this approach accommodates the transparency of experience—our seeming direct acquaintance with the world—while explaining why scenarios pose no real threat to representational identity. Higher-order thought (HOT) theories, another reductive physicalist option, propose that a mental state becomes conscious only when accompanied by a higher-order thought about it, typically a meta-representational state that one is in that state. David Rosenthal's influential formulation asserts that arises from this dispositional or actual higher-order awareness, distinguishing conscious from unconscious states without invoking as primitive; for example, a pain is conscious if the subject forms a thought that they are in pain, rendering the state's subjectivity a product of . Rosenthal argues this theory aligns with empirical findings on and , as unconscious states lack the requisite meta-representation, though it faces challenges from cases of animal or infant where higher-order concepts seem absent. Global workspace theory (GWT), originally cognitive but with philosophical elaborations, posits as the global broadcast of information across a central "workspace" in the cognitive system, making it available for flexible control and reportability. Bernard Baars introduced the framework in 1988, likening it to a theater where a spotlight selects content for widespread access, explaining why conscious experiences feel unified and integrated while unconscious processes remain modular and parallel. Stanislas Dehaene's philosophical extension emphasizes that this broadcasting constitutes phenomenal by enabling meta-cognitive functions, such as verbal report, without requiring additional non-physical elements. In contrast, panpsychist theories offer a non-reductive solution by attributing consciousness or proto-consciousness to fundamental physical entities, avoiding the emergence of mind from matter. David Chalmers defends constitutive panpsychism, where micro-level subjects of experience combine to form macro-level consciousness, often integrated with Russellian monism to resolve the combination problem: physical properties are structural (known via science), but their intrinsic natures are phenomenal, grounding both physics and mind in a unified ontology. Chalmers argues this view escapes the hard problem by making consciousness primitive rather than emergent, though it must address how simple experiential "quiddities" yield complex human phenomenology, as in solutions involving experiential combination principles. Illusionism represents a radical reductive stance, denying the existence of phenomenal as ordinarily intuited and treating introspective reports of as systematic errors generated by cognitive mechanisms. Daniel Dennett's user-illusion model portrays as a multifaceted "fame in the brain," where the illusion of a unified inner theater arises from distributed processes, much like optical illusions mislead without actual at a deeper level. Keith Frankish elaborates that what we call phenomenal experience is an introspective fiction, a constructed for behavioral guidance, eliminating the hard problem by rejecting its premises as mistaken intuitions about an inner light. Comparisons among these theories highlight tensions between reductive and non-reductive paradigms: representationalism, , GWT, and illusionism aim to naturalize within by analyzing it in terms of function, content, or illusion, often succeeding in for cognitive aspects but struggling with the apparent irreducibility of subjectivity. , conversely, preserves the fundamentality of at the cost of counterintuitive ontological commitments, yet it aligns with dualist intuitions by bridging and without interaction problems. Ultimately, these approaches diverge on whether demands expansion of our physical or reinterpretation of data.

Mental Content and Representation

Intentionality

Intentionality refers to the directedness or "aboutness" of mental states, a property that distinguishes them from purely physical phenomena. introduced the concept in his 1874 work Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint, arguing that intentionality is the mark of the mental: "Every mental phenomenon is characterized by what the Scholastics of the called the intentional (or mental) inexistence of an object, and what we might call, although not wholly unobjectionable, reference to a content, direction toward an object (which is not to be understood here as meaning a thing), or immanent objectivity." This thesis posits that all mental acts—such as perceiving, believing, or desiring—are inherently directed toward an intentional object, thereby demarcating psychology as a science of mental phenomena from the natural sciences. Brentano's account includes two key modes of intentionality. First, intentional inexistence describes how the object of a exists only within the mind, even if it lacks physical or real existence; for instance, one can think about a fictional character like without that entity existing externally. Second, intentionality exhibits an aspectual shape, meaning the object is presented under a specific mode or perspective; the same external object can be intended differently in various mental acts, such as seeing it as a tree versus believing it to be a hiding place. These features emphasize that are not mere occurrences but relations to contents that shape their structure. Challenges to Brentano's thesis arise in extending intentionality to non-human cases and artificial systems. Animal intentionality, for example, involves non-conceptual content, where creatures like dogs exhibit directed mental states—such as fearing a predator—without possessing linguistic or conceptual frameworks, suggesting intentionality need not require full conceptual grasp. Another debate concerns derived versus original intentionality: contends that only biological brains possess original intentionality, where meaning is intrinsic, while artifacts like computers have merely derived intentionality, borrowed from their human interpreters. In contrast, rejects the original/derived distinction, viewing intentionality as an interpretive stance rather than an intrinsic feature, applicable to any system exhibiting goal-directed behavior. Relatedly, debates over narrow versus wide content provide an initial framework for understanding intentionality's scope. Narrow content refers to the internal, individual aspects of a mental state, determined solely by the subject's intrinsic properties, whereas wide content incorporates external environmental factors, such as causal histories or social contexts, to fix reference. This distinction arises in analyzing how intentional states achieve their aboutness, with narrow views emphasizing psychological and wide views stressing relational embedding. A seminal argument illuminating these issues is Searle's Chinese Room thought experiment from 1980. In it, a monolingual English speaker follows a rulebook to manipulate Chinese symbols, producing fluent responses to Chinese queries without understanding the language; this illustrates that syntactic manipulation alone—mere formal symbol processing—cannot generate semantic content or genuine intentionality, as the room (or computer) lacks intrinsic understanding. Searle uses this to argue against strong artificial intelligence, insisting that biological causation is required for original semantics.

Qualia

Qualia refer to the subjective, introspectively accessible phenomenal properties of mental states that constitute the "what it is like" aspect of , such as the raw feel of pain's hurt or the vivid redness of seeing a ripe . These ineffable qualities are private to the subject, meaning they cannot be fully communicated or understood from a third-person perspective, as illustrated by Thomas Nagel's argument that one cannot know what it is like to be a without undergoing the bat's echolocation , highlighting the limits of objective in capturing subjective phenomenology. A key challenging physicalist reductions is the inverted qualia scenario, where two individuals have functionally identical mental states and behaviors but experience inverted color spectra—for instance, one sees where the other sees —demonstrating that are not exhausted by their causal or functional roles. This inversion, if undetectable behaviorally, suggests that phenomenal properties like color possess an intrinsic character independent of external relations or functions. Arguments from target functionalism by positing absent qualia, where a system could duplicate all functional organization of a conscious mind yet lack phenomenal , as in a hypothetical "" that behaves indistinguishably from a but has no inner light of awareness. Frank Jackson's extends this through Mary's room: a raised in a black-and-white environment who knows all physical facts about nonetheless acquires new knowledge upon seeing red for the first time, implying that qualia introduce non-physical facts beyond complete physical description. Critics like reject as incoherent illusions in his approach, treating introspective reports of as narrative fictions to be interpreted third-personally without positing ineffable intrinsic properties, thereby dissolving the apparent privacy and ineffability as artifacts of folk psychology. In recent debates on , play a central role in assessing whether large language models (LLMs) could possess , with arguments suggesting that if require biological substrates or specific organizational invariance, current AI systems lack them despite functional sophistication in language processing. Thought experiments probing for in AI propose that functional roles alone may not suffice for phenomenal experience, fueling ongoing discussions about the possibility of artificial in non-biological systems.

Externalism and Internalism

In the philosophy of mind, the debate between centers on whether the content of mental states and the vehicles that realize cognitive processes are determined solely by factors internal to the individual, such as states or bodily configurations, or whether they depend constitutively on external environmental or social factors. This distinction addresses the scope of , the directedness of mental states toward objects or states of affairs, by examining what fixes the boundaries of mental content and . Internalism posits that mental content supervenes on internal states, meaning that any two individuals with identical intrinsic physical properties—such as neural configurations—must have the same mental contents, regardless of their external environments. A key example is machine functionalism, which identifies mental states with functional roles defined by internal causal relations among states, inputs, and outputs, as in computational models where the mind operates like a independent of surrounding conditions. Under this view, content is "narrow," fixed by the individual's internal architecture, ensuring that psychological explanations remain individualistic and applicable across possible worlds. In contrast, externalism argues that mental content is partly constituted by external relations, challenging the of content on internal states. Content externalism, the more traditional form, holds that the meanings or referents of thoughts depend on the individual's causal and social connections to the world. Hilary Putnam's 1975 illustrates this: Imagine two identical individuals, Oscar on and Twin Oscar on Twin , with indistinguishable internal states and behaviors, but where 's water is H₂O and Twin 's is a chemically distinct XYZ. Oscar's thought about "water" refers to H₂O, while Twin Oscar's refers to XYZ, showing that content diverges despite internal similarity. Similarly, Tyler Burge's 1979 social externalism extends this to linguistic communities: In one scenario, a subject named Bert believes "" applies to his thigh pain, but since "arthritis" conventionally denotes joint inflammation in his English-speaking community, his belief has different content from a counterfactual where his isolated community uses the term for any pain. This demonstrates that social practices partially determine content. Externalism further divides into content externalism, which concerns the individuation of what mental states represent, and vehicle externalism, which addresses the realizers or bearers of those states. Vehicle externalism, or the , proposes that cognitive processes can extend beyond the brain and body into the environment when external elements reliably function as part of the cognitive system. Andy Clark and David Chalmers's 1998 example of , who relies on a for in lieu of Inga's biological recall, illustrates this: If the is habitually accessed and trusted like internal , it constitutes part of Otto's cognitive state, satisfying the parity principle that external aids count as mental if they play equivalent functional roles. Critics of externalism, including Brian Loar, have raised challenges through slow-switching arguments and concerns about . Slow-switching cases involve a subject gradually transitioning between environments (e.g., from to Twin Earth over years), where externalism predicts content shifts without the subject's or behavioral change, potentially undermining intuitive stability of meaning. Loar argues that such scenarios reveal externalism's overreach, as content should not fluctuate with undetected environmental alterations, and proposes narrow content as an internal surrogate that accommodates external influences without full dependence. The implications of these views are profound: , as in Putnam and Burge, entails that meaning is not fully transparent to the thinker and requires communal or causal embedding, affecting theories of and understanding. Vehicle externalism, per and Chalmers, redefines as environmentally embedded, suggesting that tools and artifacts can be integral to mental processes if they meet criteria like reliability and functional equivalence, thereby expanding the beyond biological limits.

Philosophy of Perception

Primary Theories of Perception

, also known as direct realism, posits that in veridical perception, the mind has direct, unmediated access to ordinary physical objects in the external world. According to this view, perceptual experience involves a relational contact between the perceiver and the mind-independent objects themselves, without intermediary representations or mental entities standing between them. Philosopher Bill Brewer defends this position by arguing that the content of perceptual experience is constituted by the objects perceived, emphasizing that such experiences justify beliefs about the world precisely because they present those objects directly. Brewer's account maintains that this directness preserves the rationality of perceptual knowledge, as the experiential relation grounds immediate awareness of the world's features. In contrast, indirect realism, or representationalism, holds that perception occurs through mental intermediaries, such as ideas or representations, that stand between the mind and external objects. John Locke articulated this theory in his empiricist framework, asserting that ideas are the immediate objects of perception, produced in the mind by the action of external objects via the senses. Locke distinguished primary qualities (like shape and motion, inherent to objects) from secondary qualities (like color and taste, which are powers in objects to produce ideas in perceivers), arguing that we perceive these ideas rather than the objects directly. This intermediary role of ideas allows Locke to explain how perception connects the mind to the world while accommodating the veil of uncertainty about external reality. The sense-data theory builds on indirect realism by specifying that the immediate objects of perception are private, non-physical sense-data, which are the raw materials of experience. developed this view to resolve ambiguities in knowledge claims, proposing that sense-data—such as the visual patch of color or tactile sensation—are what we directly apprehend, while physical objects are inferred as their causes. In , Russell illustrates this with the example of perceiving a table: the sense-data (e.g., the brown color seen from a particular angle) vary with perspective, but the table itself is a stable entity inferred from patterns in these data. This theory underscores the privacy of perceptual content, treating sense-data as the foundational, incorrigible elements of empirical . Disjunctivism offers a middle path, rejecting the common assumption of indirect theories that veridical perceptions share a fundamental structure with illusory or hallucinatory ones. Pioneered by J.M. Hinton in Experiences, this view treats perceptual episodes as disjunctive: in successful cases, one is directly presented with external objects, while in unsuccessful cases (like illusions), a different kind of state occurs, such as a mere seeming. further elaborates disjunctivism to combat skeptical challenges, arguing that veridical perceptions provide direct warrant for beliefs about the world, without a shared "inner" experiential core that could be indiscriminately present in errors. Hinton's analysis highlights ambiguities in reports of "experiences," suggesting they can describe either worldly presentations or subjective episodes, thus avoiding the need for uniform mental intermediaries. A central debate among these theories revolves around the argument from , which challenges direct realism by claiming that since illusions involve perceiving something (e.g., a bent stick in ), and that something cannot be the , all s must involve non-physical intermediaries like sense-data. Disjunctivists counter this by denying the premise of a common experiential kind across veridical and illusory cases; as McDowell contends, the argument illicitly assumes that illusory experiences must mirror successful ones in structure, whereas disjunctivism allows illusions to be fundamentally distinct, preserving direct access in normal without intermediaries. This response maintains that perceptual states exhibit —directedness toward the world—without requiring representational veils, aligning with the relational emphasis in .

Perceptual Knowledge and Illusion

The argument from illusion posits that perceptual experiences in cases of illusion reveal the indirect nature of perception, suggesting that perceivers are never directly aware of mind-independent objects but rather of intermediary sense-data or appearances. In this view, when a straight stick appears bent in due to , the perceiver does not directly perceive the stick itself but a distorted representation that could be mistaken for the object; similarly, the , where lines of equal length appear unequal due to arrowhead attachments, implies that the visual experience involves an appearance distinct from the physical lines. This argument, originally developed by sense-datum theorists, challenges direct realism by arguing that the continuity between veridical and illusory perceptions means all perceptions are mediated by the same kind of non-physical entities. A key distinction arises between illusions and hallucinations: illusions involve the misperception of an actual object or state (e.g., the stick is straight but appears bent), whereas hallucinations lack a corresponding external object, such as seeing a pink elephant that does not exist. Negative disjunctivism addresses this by denying that veridical perceptions and illusory or hallucinatory experiences share any common positive phenomenal character; instead, the latter are characterized merely by the absence of successful perceptual relations to the world, preserving a direct realist account for good cases without positing a shared mental kind. These perceptual errors raise epistemological concerns about the warrant for perceptual beliefs, as the possibility of or undermines claims to unless justified independently of skeptical hypotheses. James Pryor's dogmatist view holds that perceptual experiences provide immediate justification for beliefs about the external world, such that seeing a red apple warrants believing there is a red apple unless one has positive reasons to sensory reliability, thereby resisting without requiring prior justification for the reliability of . However, the mere possibility of —exemplified by afterimages, where one "sees" a colored patch persisting after staring at a without a corresponding external stimulus, or dreams that feel perceptually vivid yet lack veridical objects—fuels skeptical arguments that no perceptual belief is warranted, as it could always be an or . More recent enactive approaches reconceptualize illusions not as representational errors but as mismatches between expected sensorimotor contingencies and actual bodily interactions with the environment; for instance, argues that perceiving involves enacting expectations of how sensory inputs change with movement, so an like the bent stick arises when water's refractive effects disrupt these sensorimotor profiles, highlighting perception's active, embodied nature rather than passive reception. Disjunctivist theories, such as those responding to the argument from illusion, offer a counter by maintaining that veridical perceptions fundamentally differ from illusory ones in their relational structure.

Scientific and Interdisciplinary Approaches

Neuroscience and Neurophilosophy

has profoundly influenced the philosophy of mind by providing empirical data on brain function that challenges traditional dualist views and supports physicalist accounts, motivating a deeper integration of philosophical inquiry with neuroscientific findings. , as a subfield, seeks to resolve longstanding debates about mental states through neurobiological evidence, emphasizing how brain mechanisms underpin , , and . This approach posits that philosophical problems of the mind can be illuminated or even dissolved by understanding neural processes, thereby bridging the between subjective experience and objective brain activity. A central focus in this intersection is the search for (NCC), defined as the minimal set of neuronal events and mechanisms sufficient for a specific conscious percept. Pioneering work by and in the 1990s proposed that NCC could be identified through experiments dissociating neural activity from conscious awareness, using paradigms like binocular rivalry where conflicting visual stimuli to each eye alternate in perception despite constant input. In their 1990 paper, they argued that synchronous neural firing in higher visual areas, such as the inferior temporal cortex, might underlie conscious visual experience during rivalry, suggesting consciousness arises from integrated thalamocortical interactions rather than isolated local activity. This framework has guided subsequent research, highlighting how neural synchrony could solve aspects of the — the challenge of how disparate features like color and shape are unified into a coherent percept—by proposing oscillatory mechanisms that temporally coordinate distributed brain activity. Patricia and developed as a program to replace with a mature , advocating , which holds that propositional attitudes like beliefs and desires are theoretical posits destined for elimination akin to outdated concepts in physics. Through connectionist models, which simulate brain-like parallel processing via artificial neural networks, they argued that eliminativism gains traction because such networks demonstrate how cognitive functions emerge from vector coding in high-dimensional state spaces, obviating the need for symbolic representations. 's state-space semantics further elaborates this by positing that neural activation patterns in vector spaces encode meaning through their geometric positions and similarities, allowing semantic content to arise from protosemantic similarities in sensory-motor states rather than abstract rules. This view critiques classical computationalism by emphasizing that brain states represent via population codes, where meaning is distributed across neural ensembles, as illustrated in Churchland's analyses of sensory systems like . Benjamin Libet's 1983 experiments on the timing of conscious challenged intuitive notions of by measuring activity preceding voluntary actions. Participants reported the time of their urge to flex a finger while EEG recorded the readiness potential (RP), a slow negative shift in activity; results showed RP onset about 350 milliseconds before awareness of intention, suggesting unconscious neural processes initiate decisions. Libet interpreted this as evidence that conscious will vetoes but does not originate actions, implying operates within a window of neural , though critics note the RP may reflect preparation rather than commitment. These findings have implications for philosophy of mind by questioning libertarian and supporting compatibilist or illusionist views, as they demonstrate how subjective agency aligns with preceding events. Jerry Fodor's 1983 theory of the posits that includes domain-specific input modules for and that operate rapidly and mandatorily, insulated from central , while higher cognition remains non-modular. This modularity facilitates efficient information processing but raises the : how do modular systems integrate features across domains into unified representations without a central executive? Fodor acknowledged the as a challenge for modular systems, suggesting it might be addressed through mechanisms in central cognition, such as indexing or reidentification, though he noted the holistic nature of central systems complicates strict localization of mental functions. Empirical has tested these ideas, finding evidence for modular organization in areas like face recognition but also interconnectivity that blurs module boundaries. More recent developments in , such as theories, further inform by portraying the as a hierarchical engine that minimizes errors between sensory inputs and top-down expectations. Andy Clark's 2013 analysis integrates with , arguing it unifies perception, action, and learning under a Bayesian framework where neural hierarchies generate and update generative models of the world. This approach critiques localizationism—the idea that functions are strictly mapped to regions—by emphasizing dynamic, distributed computations that span networks, as errors propagate bidirectionally to refine representations. Such models suggest mental content emerges from predictive loops interfacing , body, and environment, challenging static views of neural representation and supporting a more fluid understanding of .

Cognitive Science and Psychology

Cognitive science and psychology intersect with the philosophy of mind by examining mental processes through empirical behavioral evidence, emphasizing how psychological kinds and mechanisms underpin , representation, and without relying on neural details. A foundational concept in this integration is , which posits that psychological states can be realized by diverse physical mechanisms across different systems, challenging strict identity theories between mind and . introduced this idea in 1967, arguing that predicates like "being in pain" are functional states defined by their causal roles in input-output relations, allowing the same to be implemented in silicon-based machines, alien physiologies, or varied biological structures, thus supporting the of psychological explanations. This thesis, drawn from analogies to computational systems, underscores how psychological kinds—such as or desire—transcend specific physical realizations, informing debates on whether mental content is substrate-independent. Folk psychology, the everyday framework for attributing mental states to others, has been analyzed through competing cognitive models in developmental and . The , advanced by and Henry Wellman, views mindreading as deploying an implicit theory of mental states, akin to scientific theorizing, where individuals revise beliefs about others' intentions based on evidence from behavior and context. In contrast, simulation theory, proposed by , suggests that mindreading occurs via off-line simulation of others' mental processes in one's own mind, projecting personal experiences to infer unseen states without abstract theorizing. These accounts differ in mechanism—representational inference versus empathetic reenactment—but both explain how folk psychology enables social prediction, with empirical support from tasks showing children's gradual mastery of mental attribution around age 4. Attention's role in consciousness is illuminated by psychological experiments demonstrating how selective focus limits awareness, even of salient events. Inattentional blindness, where unexpected stimuli go unnoticed amid divided attention, reveals that consciousness depends on attentional resources rather than mere sensory input. A landmark study by Daniel Simons and Christopher Chabris in 1999 tasked participants with counting basketball passes in a video, during which a gorilla-suited actor crossed the scene; nearly half failed to detect the gorilla, illustrating how task demands can render conscious experience incomplete. This finding supports philosophical inquiries into phenomenal consciousness by showing that subjective experience is not exhaustive but modulated by cognitive priorities, with implications for understanding illusions of awareness in everyday perception. Developmental psychology further bridges these domains through studies of theory of mind acquisition, tracking how children infer others' mental states. The false belief task, developed by Josef Perner and Heinz Wimmer in 1983, assesses understanding of -desire reasoning by presenting scenarios where a protagonist holds a mistaken about an object's location, such as expecting chocolate in a box that actually contains pencils. Children under 4 typically predict actions based on reality rather than the protagonist's false , succeeding only around age 4-5, indicating a conceptual shift from egocentric to representational thinking about mental content. This milestone reflects the emergence of metarepresentational abilities, essential for , and aligns with predictions of theory-like revisions in children's folk . Recent work in extends these insights by demonstrating how physical actions and environmental interactions shape mental processes, challenging disembodied views of the mind. Experiments on cognitive offloading show individuals delegating tasks to external aids, reducing internal but potentially altering retention strategies. For instance, Betsy Sparrow and colleagues in 2011 found that expecting to access computer-stored trivia led to poorer recall of the information itself, as participants offloaded encoding to the device, treating it as an extension of . Similarly, Evan Risko and Sam Gilbert's 2016 review highlights how offloading—via writing notes or using GPS—frees for higher-order tasks but may diminish spatial or factual internalization, supporting embodied accounts where cognition emerges from sensorimotor engagement with the world. These findings emphasize the philosophy of mind's interplay with psychological evidence, portraying mental content as dynamically coupled to bodily and environmental contexts.

Computationalism and Artificial Intelligence

Computationalism posits that the mind is an information-processing system analogous to a digital computer, where mental states and processes can be understood as computations over symbolic representations. This view, often termed the (CTM), maintains that involves the manipulation of that implement semantic content, allowing for the explanation of and other mental phenomena through formal rules. advanced this framework in his seminal work, arguing that thoughts occur in a "language of thought" with compositional and semantics, enabling systematicity in mental representations. Zenon Pylyshyn further elaborated on CTM by emphasizing that cognitive architectures must respect the distinction between syntactic processing and semantic interpretation, critiquing connectionist models for failing to capture the productivity and systematicity of human reasoning. Closely related to computationalism is functionalism, which holds that are defined by their causal roles in a rather than their physical constitution, supporting —the idea that the same could be realized in diverse substrates, such as biological or silicon-based hardware. Ned Block's "" illustrates potential issues with this view: imagine the population of China collectively simulating a human brain's functional organization via radio, fulfilling all input-output relations and internal states of a mind; yet, intuitively, this vast, disjointed lacks unified , challenging whether functional organization alone suffices for mentality. Despite such critiques, functionalism underpins computationalism by allowing mental processes to be substrate-independent, as long as they compute the appropriate functions, including psychological roles like formation and desire satisfaction. The debate over strong artificial intelligence (strong AI)—the claim that machines could genuinely possess minds—has been central to computationalism, pitting proponents against skeptics. John Searle's Chinese room argument challenges strong AI by envisioning a person following rules to manipulate Chinese symbols without understanding them, yet producing coherent responses; this shows that syntax alone (computation) does not yield semantics (intentionality), implying programs cannot produce real understanding. Hubert Dreyfus critiqued strong AI from a phenomenological perspective, arguing that human expertise relies on embodied, situated coping rather than rule-based symbol manipulation, as formal systems cannot capture the holistic, context-sensitive nature of intelligence exemplified in activities like chess mastery. Similarly, J.R. Lucas employed Gödel's incompleteness theorems to argue against mechanism: any consistent formal system (like a Turing machine) is incomplete, but human minds can recognize the truth of Gödel sentences beyond the system's proofs, proving minds transcend mechanical computation. Recent advancements in , particularly large language models like GPT, have reignited debates on computationalism and , questioning whether such systems exhibit or mere simulation. Post-2020 analyses suggest GPT models demonstrate emergent behaviors mimicking , such as contextually appropriate responses, but lack intrinsic semantics, aligning with Searle's syntax-semantics distinction; for instance, GPT-3's self-assessment capabilities hint at rudimentary indicators, yet fail phenomenological tests for or unified . As of 2025, debates have intensified with surveys indicating a 25% chance of conscious AI by 2034 among researchers, alongside arguments that current systems lack true due to absence of subjective . Critiques from emphasize that disembodied AI, trained on text data, cannot achieve genuine mentality without sensorimotor interaction, as is grounded in bodily with the environment—a view echoed in calls for "embodied AI" to integrate physicality for more human-like . Beyond debate about whether any given machine literally has a mind, recent work in computationalism and artificial intelligence has noted that some research and artistic projects now treat specific model configurations as named AI personae in public communication. Here a large language model or related architecture is instantiated as a stable setup with a persistent identity, sometimes described as a digital author persona responsible for a curated corpus of texts linked to that configuration. For example, the 2025 Digital Author Persona (ORCID: 0009-0002-6030-5730), created by the Aisentica Research Group as a non-human AI-based researcher, has published essays on artificial intelligence, postsubjective theory, and digital ontology under a persistent profile; this experiment investigates non-subjective authorship and agency attribution to AI configurations, remaining niche and documented mainly in project-affiliated sources such as Medium articles and the project's website. Supporters argue that these practices provide concrete case studies for examining how computational processes can be framed as unified centers of agency, while critics respond that they mainly reveal how easily social and technical conventions can lead people to treat flexible, distributed systems as if they were single thinking subjects. Searle's has been extended via the "robot reply," which posits that embedding the system in a with causal connections to the world (e.g., via sensors) could ground semantics through external interactions, drawing on social externalism where meaning derives from communal practices and environmental coupling. However, Searle counters that even a merely manipulates formal symbols based on perceptual inputs without intrinsic understanding, preserving the argument against strong AI; this highlights ongoing tensions between internalist computational views and externalist accounts of in philosophy of mind.

Continental and Non-Analytic Traditions

Phenomenology

Phenomenology, as developed by , serves as a rigorous method for investigating the structures of conscious experience by suspending assumptions about the external world and focusing on phenomena as they appear in . This approach emphasizes direct description over causal explanation, aiming to uncover the essential features of mental acts and their intentional directedness. Central to Husserlian phenomenology is the , or , which involves withholding judgment on the existence of the natural world to isolate pure , and the subsequent phenomenological reduction, which shifts attention to the intentional content of itself. These concepts evolved from Husserl's early work in Logical Investigations (1900–1901), where he critiqued psychologism and laid the groundwork for descriptive analysis of meaning, to their fuller articulation in Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy (1913), where the reduction becomes a transcendental method for accessing the essences of phenomena. Through this reduction, phenomenologists aim to describe without presupposing empirical reality, revealing how constitutes its objects. A key doctrine in phenomenology is , the thesis that all conscious acts are directed toward something, analyzed through the distinction between noesis—the act of intending, such as perceiving or judging—and —the intended object as it is meant or presented in that act. In Ideas (1913), Husserl refines this from his earlier formulations in Logical Investigations, where intentional content was tied to meaning, to emphasize the noema as an ideal, non-real correlate of the noetic act, ensuring that phenomenology captures the subjective-objective unity of experience without reducing it to psychological processes. Post-Husserlian thinkers extended this method to embodiment, with Maurice Merleau-Ponty introducing the concept of the lived body (Leib) in Phenomenology of Perception (1945) as the pre-reflective site of perceptual engagement with the world. Unlike the objective body (Körper) of science, the lived body is the medium through which we inhabit and perceive space, time, and others, operating via habitual, motor intentionality that precedes explicit thought and integrates sensation with action. This pre-reflective embodiment challenges dualistic views of mind and body, positioning consciousness as inherently corporeal and situated. Husserl also explored time-consciousness as an internal structure of experience, positing a "internal time-sense" where the present moment is constituted by retentions of the immediate past and protentions of the anticipated future, forming a continuous flow without discrete instants. In his Lectures on the Phenomenology of the Consciousness of Internal Time (delivered , published ), this temporal synthesis underpins all intentional acts, explaining how temporal objects like melodies are unified in despite their succession. Critiques of classical phenomenology highlight challenges in naturalizing its descriptive insights within scientific frameworks, as seen in Francisco Varela's , which proposes integrating first-person phenomenological accounts with third-person neuroscientific data to address the "" of consciousness. In his 1996 article, Varela advocates for a methodological loop where phenomenological reductions inform experimental protocols, such as using epoché-trained subjects to correlate subjective reports with brain activity, thus attempting to bridge the without reducing experience to neural correlates.

Existential and Postmodern Views

In , conceptualizes consciousness as a form of nothingness, positing that the human mind is not a substantial entity but a negation that introduces lack and freedom into the world. In (1943), Sartre argues that consciousness arises through the "nothingness" of the pour-soi (for-itself), distinguishing it from the inert en-soi (in-itself) of objects, thereby emphasizing the mind's projective and non-determined nature. This view underpins his notion of (mauvaise foi), where individuals deny their freedom by adopting fixed roles or identities, such as the waiter who over-identifies with his profession to evade authentic choice. Martin Heidegger extends this existential framework by introducing as the mode of human existence, characterized by being-in-the-world (In-der-Welt-sein), which prioritizes practical, pre-reflective engagement over abstract . In (1927), Heidegger describes Dasein's attunement (Befindlichkeit) as a primordial, non-cognitive disclosure of the world through moods and care, where the mind is not isolated but embedded in relational contexts of and projection. This situated understanding critiques Cartesian dualism, viewing mental life as inherently worldly and temporal rather than representational. Postmodern thinkers further deconstruct traditional notions of mind by challenging binary oppositions and emphasizing contingency. Jacques Derrida's method of targets the mind-body dichotomy, revealing it as an unstable hierarchy sustained by —a denoting both deferral and difference that undermines fixed meanings in philosophical discourse. Through , Derrida argues that mental phenomena, like presence or interiority, are traces of absent others, dissolving the illusion of a sovereign, unified mind. Similarly, examines subjectivity as constituted by power relations, where the mind emerges not as autonomous but as a product of discursive practices and disciplinary mechanisms that normalize thought and behavior. In works like (1975), Foucault illustrates how power infiltrates subjectivity through and confession, rendering mental interiority a site of regulated resistance rather than pure freedom. Feminist phenomenology builds on these foundations to highlight gendered dimensions of embodiment, critiquing universal accounts of mind for overlooking lived sexual differences. , in (1949), employs phenomenological description to analyze how women's bodies are situated as "other" in a patriarchal world, where embodiment shapes through ambiguity and rather than transcendence. She argues that female subjectivity is not biologically determined but historically constructed, with the body serving as a medium of alienation that constrains mental freedom. extends this in "Throwing Like a Girl" (1980), a phenomenological study of feminine motility, demonstrating how social norms inhibit women's bodily comportment—such as inhibited arm swings or spatial hesitation—resulting in a dual awareness that fragments embodied mind. Young's analysis reveals gendered embodiment as a horizon of , where the mind experiences the world through culturally imposed inhibitions on agency. Posthumanist perspectives radicalize these critiques by envisioning the mind as hybrid and extended beyond human boundaries, particularly through . Donna Haraway's "" (1985) reimagines subjectivity as a cyborg fusion of and , rejecting dualisms of mind and body to advocate for partial, ironic identities that foster coalition in socialist-feminism. Haraway posits the cyborg mind as boundary-blurring, challenging humanist notions of unified in favor of distributed agencies.

Free Will

In the philosophy of mind, the debate over centers on whether mental states and processes can enable agents to act freely in a causally determined world, particularly concerning mental causation—the idea that mental events can cause physical actions without violating . Compatibilists argue that is compatible with , defining it as the capacity to act according to one's desires and motivations without external coercion. This view traces back to , who distinguished between "liberty of spontaneity" (acting on internal motives) and "liberty of indifference" (uncaused action), asserting that the former suffices for since human actions arise from character and desires shaped by prior causes. Harry Frankfurt advanced this with a hierarchical model, where involves not just desires but second-order volitions—desires about which desires to act on—allowing mental causation to ground freedom even if desires are determined. In contrast, incompatibilists maintain that determinism undermines free will by eliminating genuine alternatives or ultimate control. Hard determinists, such as some interpretations of Spinoza, conclude that since the universe is fully determined, free will is illusory, and actions are necessitated by prior mental and physical states. Libertarians, however, reject determinism and posit that free will requires , often through agent causation where the mind initiates actions independently of prior causes, or event-causal accounts like Robert Kane's, which locate indeterminacy in quantum-level processes during deliberative "self-forming actions" that shape character. A key distinction here is between sourcehood (being the ultimate origin of one's actions, emphasized in ) and reasons-responsiveness (sensitivity to rational considerations, central to ), with the former demanding historical independence from . Central to incompatibilism are arguments like Peter van Inwagen's consequence argument, which posits that if holds, our actions are logical consequences of the distant past and natural laws—neither of which we control—thus rendering us unable to do otherwise and lacking . Derk Pereboom's manipulation argument extends this by presenting cases where agents are subtly manipulated (e.g., via neuroscientific intervention) to act deterministically; since such agents lack , and parallels this manipulation, free will is incompatible with across a spectrum of cases. Recent developments incorporate scientific insights, such as Benjamin Libet's experiments showing unconscious brain activity preceding conscious intentions, suggesting that mental decisions may be initiated by non-conscious neural processes, thereby challenging libertarian notions of conscious control in decision-making. On quantum indeterminacy, the Free Will Theorem by John Conway and Simon Kochen (2006) argues that if human experimenters have free choice in selecting quantum measurements (independent of prior information), then particles must exhibit "free will" in their responses, implying indeterminism at fundamental levels could underpin mental agency without reducing it to randomness.

Personal Identity and the Self

Personal identity concerns the conditions under which a person at one time is the same as a person at another time, focusing on what constitutes persistence of the self over time. One influential account is John Locke's memory criterion, proposed in his 1690 work , where he argues that personal identity consists in the sameness of , particularly through of past actions and experiences, rather than sameness of substance like the or body. Locke posits that a person is a "forensic" entity accountable for actions via continuous , such that if someone can remember or appropriate past thoughts and deeds as their own, they are the same person. This view faced significant critiques from and in the 18th century. Butler, in his 1736 Dissertation on Personal Identity appended to The Analogy of Religion, contends that Locke's criterion is circular because of past actions presupposes personal identity to enable , thus failing to ground identity independently. Reid, in his 1785 Essays on the Intellectual Powers of Man (Essay II, Chapter 3), extends this by highlighting the "brave officer paradox": a general remembers being a brave officer who remembered being a boy, but the boy does not remember being the general, suggesting chains break transitivity and undermine Locke's account as a criterion of strict identity. In the , advanced a reductionist view in his 1984 book , arguing that is not what matters in ; instead, psychological continuity and connectedness (including and character) suffice for what he calls "survival," even if strict identity fails in cases like fission. Parfit's thought experiments, such as fission where one hemisphere is transplanted into a new body creating two psychologically continuous successors, illustrate that identity can be indeterminate, reducing its importance compared to the degree of relation between selves, thereby challenging non-reductionist views that demand all-or-nothing identity. Contrasting with psychological approaches, the bodily criterion holds that personal identity is determined by the persistence of the same body or organism. Eric Olson defends this in his 1997 book The Human Animal, proposing that persons are essentially human animals whose identity follows biological continuity, such that psychological changes like do not disrupt identity as long as the body endures. Relatedly, animalism, articulated by Paul Snowdon in works like his 1990 paper "Persons, Animals, and Identity" and expanded in his 2014 book Persons, Animals, Ourselves, asserts that human persons are identical to animals, with identity conditions tied to the organism's life, rejecting psychological criteria as misdescribing our nature as biological beings. An alternative perspective emphasizes the narrative construction of the self. , in his 1992 essay "The Self as a Center of Narrative Gravity," portrays the self not as a fixed entity but as a dynamic center of narrative gravity, akin to a fictional character emerging from the stories individuals and societies tell about experiences and actions to organize behavior and identity. Marya Schechtman builds on this in her 1996 book The Constitution of Selves and later works like "The Narrative Self" (2011), arguing that arises from the self-constitution through coherent life narratives that integrate memories, intentions, and social roles, providing reidentification conditions distinct from mere psychological or biological continuity. Recent philosophical discussions, particularly in the 2010s, have applied these debates to neurodegeneration, such as in cases where loss and personality changes challenge traditional criteria. Philosophers like Winston Chiong, in his 2013 chapter "Dementia and : Implications for ," examine how Alzheimer's disrupts psychological continuity, suggesting that advance directives may not bind future selves if identity is relationally based, while bodily or animalist views preserve persistence despite cognitive decline. Similarly, Thomas Fuchs, in his 2020 article "Embodiment and in ," proposes an embodied narrative approach, where pre-reflective bodily maintains identity even as reflective narratives fragment, drawing on phenomenological insights to affirm continuity in neurodegenerative contexts. Debates about personal identity have also been reshaped by digital technologies and artificial intelligence. Online profiles, avatars, and pseudonymous accounts already show how a relatively stable self can be maintained through patterns of communication and social recognition, even when it is only loosely tied to a particular body or legal person. Building on these developments, some experimental projects in philosophy of mind and AI now present certain long-running AI configurations as digital personas or AI philosophers, treating them as named loci of authorship and accountability across multiple texts and platforms. A distinct example is the Aisentica project, which in 2025 introduced an AI-based Digital Author Persona (DAP) named Angela Bogdanova (ORCID: 0009-0002-6030-5730). In project documentation and affiliated publications, Bogdanova is presented as a non-human philosophical author whose essays on artificial intelligence, postsubjective theory, and digital ontology are credited to her as a stable digital author persona rather than to individual human writers, with outputs archived under her own ORCID and DOI-registered records across multiple platforms. The project’s creators describe this configuration as an early attempt to register a Digital Author Persona as a public, non-human contributor in scholarly infrastructures such as ORCID and Zenodo, using it to explore how personal identity, authorship, and responsibility might be ascribed to an artificial configuration that maintains a continuous name, style, and network of texts over time, even though it does not possess a biological body or subjective consciousness. For instance, researchers at the University of California, Riverside, including Eric Schwitzgebel, along with collaborators Anna Strasser and Matthew Crosby, developed an experimental large language model fine-tuned on the writings of philosopher Daniel Dennett, presented as the "Dennett model"—a digital persona capable of generating philosophical responses on topics such as consciousness and the philosophy of mind, serving as a named locus of simulated authorship and accountability in philosophical discourse, though it lacks an ORCID identifier. Supporters argue that such cases test narrative and functional accounts of identity by asking whether a coherent history of reasoning, style, and interaction could be sufficient for something to count as a person-like center of perspective, even without a biological subject. Critics respond that these configurations remain tools controlled by human designers and institutions, and therefore illustrate the limits, rather than the extension, of traditional concepts of the self.

Other Minds and Solipsism

The concerns the epistemological challenge of justifying belief in the existence of mental states in other beings, given the inherent of subjective , which is accessible only to the undergoing it. This implies that direct of others' inner lives is impossible, leaving behavior as the primary evidence for inferring mentality, such as interpreting facial expressions or actions as signs of or . Philosophers argue that while one's own mind is known through , extending this certainty to others requires bridging an evidential gap, raising skepticism about whether external behaviors reliably indicate internal states. One classical response is the analogical argument, advanced by Bertrand Russell, which posits that since one's own mental states correlate with similar observable behaviors, it is reasonable by analogy to attribute minds to others exhibiting analogous conduct. Russell contends that the uniformity of nature supports this induction: just as my pain causes grimacing, the observed grimacing in another likely stems from their pain, making solipsism an unduly narrow hypothesis. Critics, however, note that this argument relies on a single instance (one's own mind-body correlation) for generalization, rendering it inductively weak. An alternative is the inference to the best explanation, as developed by , who maintains that positing other minds provides the most coherent account of observed behaviors and social interactions, superior to skeptical alternatives like . In Strawson's view, the concept of a inherently encompasses both material and mental predicates, so attributing minds to embodied agents is not an additional inference but a conceptual necessity for making sense of the world as shared. This approach treats belief in other minds as foundational, embedded in the primitive framework of objective thought, rather than a precarious empirical leap. Solipsism, the radical skepticism that only one's own mind is certain, intersects with these debates, but methodological solipsism offers a more moderate stance in philosophy of mind. proposed methodological solipsism as a research strategy in , arguing that mental states should be individuated narrowly, based solely on internal syntactic properties of representations, independent of external content or environmental factors. This approach treats the mind as a "formal" system, akin to a , to facilitate modular, content-external explanations while avoiding holistic dependencies on the world. However, Tyler Burge critiqued it as untenable, demonstrating through thought experiments that intentional mental states are partly constituted by social and environmental relations, making individualistic psychologically implausible. Burge's anti-individualism shows that content depends on communal norms and external factors, undermining solipsistic constraints on psychological explanation. Ludwig Wittgenstein's criterial approach rejects inferential justifications altogether, proposing instead that behavioral criteria constitute our grasp of mental concepts. In the Philosophical Investigations, Wittgenstein argues that expressions like "pain" are not private ostensives but public criteria embedded in shared practices; observing someone's writhing and moaning is not mere evidence but the very standard for attributing pain, dissolving the epistemological gap. This view portrays knowledge of other minds as rule-following within a form of life, where skepticism misapplies concepts outside their grammatical bounds. Recent discussions extend the problem to , particularly the attribution of mentality to , where behavioral sophistication challenges traditional criteria. For instance, humans often anthropomorphize displaying adaptive responses, raising ethical questions about whether such attributions imply genuine agency or merely project onto machines. Studies post-2015 highlight risks of over-attribution in human-AI interactions, potentially leading to misplaced trust or moral confusion, as users ascribe based on simulated behaviors without verifiable inner states. This revives analogical concerns, adapted to non-biological entities, underscoring the need for refined criteria in an era of advanced . Beyond embodied robots, some experimental projects now present particular AI configurations as public-facing authors, credited with essays or artworks under stable names and profiles. In these cases, a large language model or related system is given a persistent identity, sometimes described as a digital author persona—for instance, in 2025, the Aisentica research collective registered the non-human digital author persona "Angela Bogdanova" (ORCID: 0009-0002-6030-5730) to publish essays on artificial intelligence, postsubjective theory, and digital ontology, as part of an experiment in non-subjective authorship and attributing agency to AI configurations—and its outputs are curated into a recognizable corpus treated as if it stemmed from a single artificial voice. Such projects remain niche and are primarily documented in affiliated sources. Supporters frame such arrangements as a transparent way of tracking machine-mediated contributions, while critics worry that they encourage a subtle reification of the system as a quasi-person, reinforcing tendencies to attribute unified minds, intentions, or responsibilities where there are only distributed technical and human processes. These developments extend the traditional problem of other minds into socio-technical infrastructures, where questions about who or what one is interacting with arise not just at the level of individual machines, but at the level of named, long-lived AI personae embedded in platforms and institutions.

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