Strong Emergence as a Defese of Non-Reductive Physicalism

Autores

  • Carl Gillett Illinois Wesleyan University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5007/%25x

Resumo

Jaegwon Kim, and others, have recently posed a powerful challenge to both emergentism and non-reductive physicalism by providing arguments that these positons are committed to an untenabie combination of both 'upward' and 'dounward'  determination. In section 1, I illuminate how the nature of the realization relation underlies such skeptical arguments However, in section 2, I suggest that such conclusions involve a confusion between the implications of physicalism and those of a related thesis in 'Completeness of Physics' (CoP). I show tht the truth of CoP poses a very serious obstacle to realized properties being efficacious in a physicalist universe and suggest that abandoning CoP offers hope for defending non-reductive physicalism. I then fornulate a schema for a physicalist metaphysics, in section 3, which rejects CoP. This scenario is one where microphysical properties have a few conditional powers that they contribute to individuals when they realize certain properties. In such a situation, I argue, though physicalism holds true there is still plausibly both `upward' and 'downward' determination, where the latter is crucially an underappreciated form of determmation I term 'non- causal'. Ultimately, I conclude that this metaphysical schema offers a coherent account of Strongly ernergent properties that preserves the truth of NRP, albeit in a form that is purged of any committment to CoP. Finally, in section 4, I carefully explore which of Kim's assumptions and arguments this metaphysics undermines.

Biografia do Autor

Carl Gillett, Illinois Wesleyan University

Dept. Philosophy, Northern Illinois Univ.,
Personal Details
Date and Place of birth: 1967 - Oxford, UK.
UK Citizen and US Permanent Resident.
Education
Ph.D., 1997, Philosophy.  Rutgers University, New Brunswick.
Thesis: Naturalization: Physicalism and Scientific Theory Appraisal.
Committee: Jerry Fodor (Adviser), Barry Loewer and Stephen Stich.
B.A., 1989, Philosophy.  Cambridge University.
Areas of Specialization:           Philosophy of Mind/Psychology; Metaphysics; Philosophy of Science.
Areas of Competence:             Philosophy of Religion; Philosophy of Neuroscience
Employment
2007-          Associate Professor, Northern Illinois University.
2003-2007  Associate Professor, Illinois Wesleyan University.
2003-04      Post-Doctoral Fellow, University of Notre Dame.
1997-2002  Assistant Professor, Illinois Wesleyan University.
1996-97      Instructor, Illinois Wesleyan University.
Edited Books
2001: Physicalism and its Discontents. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (Co-edited with Barry Loewer).
Monographs
Completed Manuscript: The Roots of Reduction and Fruits of Emergence.
Under Contract (Due 2010): Building the Brain: Revisiting the Foundations of Neuroscience and Psychology. New York: Blackwell. (With Kenneth Aizawa).

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Publicado

2002-01-01

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