4982
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Dualism implies some brain events with no physical cause, and others with no physical effect [Kirk,R]
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Full Idea:
If the mind causes brain events, then they are not caused by other brain events, and such causal gaps should be detectable by scientists; there should also be a gap of brain-events which cause no other brain events, because they are causing mind events.
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From:
Robert Kirk (Mind and Body [2003], §2.5)
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A reaction:
This is the double causation problem which Spinoza had spotted (Idea 4862). Expressed this way, it seems a screamingly large problem for dualism. We should be able to discover some VERY strange physical activity in the brain.
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4991
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Behaviourism seems a good theory for intentional states, but bad for phenomenal ones [Kirk,R]
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Full Idea:
For many kinds of mental states, notably intentional ones such as beliefs and desires, behaviourism is appealing, ..but for sensations and experiences such as pain, it seems grossly implausible.
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From:
Robert Kirk (Mind and Body [2003], §5.1)
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A reaction:
The theory does indeed make a bit more sense for intentional states, but it still strikes me as nonsense that there is no more to my belief that 'Whales live in the Atlantic' than a disposition to say something. WHY do I say this something?
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4994
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Behaviourism offers a good alternative to simplistic unitary accounts of mental relationships [Kirk,R]
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Full Idea:
There is a temptation to think that 'aboutness', and the 'contents' of thoughts, and the relation of 'reference', are single and unitary relationships, but behaviourism offers an alternative approach.
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From:
Robert Kirk (Mind and Body [2003], §5.5)
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A reaction:
Personally I wouldn't touch behaviourism with a barge-pole (as it ducks the question of WHY certain behaviour occurs), but a warning against simplistic accounts of intentional states is good. I am sure there cannot be a single neat theory of refererence.
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4984
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All meaningful psychological statements can be translated into physics [Kirk,R]
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Full Idea:
All psychological statements which are meaningful, that is to say, which are in principle verifiable, are translatable into propositions which do not involve psychological concepts, but only the concepts of physics.
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From:
Robert Kirk (Mind and Body [2003], §3.8)
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A reaction:
This shows how eliminativist behaviourism arises out of logical positivism (by only allowing what is verifiable). The simplest objection: we can't verify the mental states of others, because they are private, but they are still the best explanation.
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