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