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Full Idea
The emergentism (of Searle), like ethical intuitionism, views mind-body supervenience as something that admits no explanation - it is a brute fact.
Gist of Idea
Emergentism says there is no explanation for a supervenient property
Source
Jaegwon Kim (Mind in a Physical World [1998], §1 p.013)
Book Ref
Kim,Jaegwon: 'Mind in the Physical World' [MIT 2000], p.13
A Reaction
This is why 'emergence' is no sort of theory, and is really old-fashioned dualism in a dubious naturalistic disguise. If mind 'emerges', there is presumably a causal mechanism for that.
22741 | The incorporeal is not in the nature of body, and so could not emerge from it [Sext.Empiricus] |
5787 | There is non-event causation between mind and brain, as between a table and its solidity [Searle] |
2313 | Emergentism says there is no explanation for a supervenient property [Kim] |
2328 | The only mental property that might be emergent is that of qualia [Kim] |
4084 | Non-reductive physicalism seeks an explanation of supervenience, but emergentists accept it as basic [Crane] |
2405 | Perhaps consciousness is physically based, but not logically required by that base [Chalmers] |
6148 | Human organisms can exercise downward causation [Merricks] |
14911 | Science is opposed to downward causation [Ladyman/Ross] |
14556 | Strong emergence seems to imply top-down causation, originating in consciousness [Mumford/Anjum] |