Consciousness and Its Place in Nature: Does Physicalism Entail Panpsychism?
D**Y
All For One and One for All?
I have been going to meetings, workshops and seminars about consciousness since I was knee high to a puppy, and after a few years when it was a minority interest, it is very noticeable that consciousness is currently back in favor, with new books, journals and research appearing extremely rapidly.The interdisciplinary conferences are always fun, though they tend to be populated by an extraordinary array of people, many of whom are convinced that they have The Answer, and nothing will ever dissuade them. I have met mystics, philosophers, psychologists, brain scientists and a lot of people who used to do physics. Several Nobel laureates have written books purporting to explain the connections between consciousness and their primary area of expertise.Yet for all this activity, we are still left with the central problem that philosophers call `the hard problem:" if, as most materialists believe, the world is made entirely of physical matter, how can matter be conscious? How could three pounds of material inside the skull have experiences?Most people who have done philosophy 101 will have learned that there are two main schools of thought about the "hard problem." The first says that the hard problem is easy: consciousness `emerges' from neural processes. This succeeds in replacing the question, "what is consciousness and how is it possible?" with a similar one: "what is emergence and how is that possible?" In effect "explaining" one mystery with another one.Option two is to say that the hard problem is so hard that it is insoluble: consciousness must be some sort of illusion. Some serious writers, including the editor of a popular magazine on psychology, have claimed that all of human experience can be reduced to reflexes, and if we believe in consciousness, love and faith, these are all programs, because we are, in fact, not conscious at all. Though I know, like and respect many of them, they remind me of some of the members of the Flat Earth Society who continued their activities for almost twenty years after the moon landings. I remember hearing the announcement that the final thirteen members of the British branch of the society decided to call it a day.There is a third alternative that proposes that the universe is not made only of matter, but that it also composed of another material, mind, perhaps, that is the home of consciousness. We then have another problem: if matter and mind are fundamentally different, how can they interact? How can one cause another to change? This is far form being an academic exercise: if you feel that you would really like some chocolate, how does that cause a change in your physiology and behavior? We all know that the desire can change your body and behavior, but how?A fourth approach, the non-dual, says that everything is Mind and that matter is but one of its manifestations. This is a fundamental tenet of Hindu, Buddhist and Taoist traditions, and beloved in the New Age movement. There are, though, a number of technical snags with this very attractive idea.So we clearly need to find some way to square the circle.So this is the background to Galen Strawson's new book. It begins with a lead essay by Strawson, commentaries by 18 other philosophers, and then Strawson's extensive comments on the comments.The book is a goldmine of valuable insights. Strawson is imaginative and the commentaries are insightful, informative and very well argued. Unlike many books on philosophy, it is fun to read.There is no question that Strawson's fascinating model is at odds with most mainline thinking in science, psychology and philosophy.Strawson's three main principles are first that the existence of consciousness is undeniable; second is the principle of monism: that everything that exists is made of the same material. Third is the notion that emergence is not possible: a mind could not spring out of the activity of material cells in the brain. He argues that although water can emerge form the combination of one oxygen and two hydrogen atoms, the same trick could not happen with consciousness. There is no way of organizing matter that is not conscious, so that it produces something that is.This leads to a philosophical position that could have straight out of the mouth of an Advaita Vedantist at any time over the last thirteen centuries.If everything is made of the same sort of stuff as tables and chairs, cats and dogs, and if at least some of the things made of that sort of stuff are conscious and if there is no emergence, it follows that the stuff that those tables and chairs and cats and dogs are made of, must itself be conscious. This is the central core of the "panpsychist" philosophy that views all matter as involving consciousness. Even an atom is sentient.He goes on to say that there are no experiences without subjects of experience; if there is a pain, it must belong to and be experienced by someone. The trouble with that is the experience of meditators and mystics who report pure egoless experience.I normally like books that give me answers. This one does not, but I have a strong intuition that the debates in this book are going to generate more and unexpected answers.I am going to leave the last word to Galen Strawson,"There is, I feel sure, a fundamental sense in which monism is true, a fundamental sense in which there is only one kind of stuff in the universe. Plainly, though, we don't fully understand the nature of this stuff, and I don't suppose we ever will - even if we can develop a way of apprehending things that transcends discursive forms of thought."An excellent mental work out, so it is warmly recommended!
F**G
It has become OK to be a Panpsychist
All my life as a student of philosophy I have had to endure scorn and derision whenever I expressed skepticism about physicalism. "You cannot really be a Cartesian dualist, can you?" "Do you believe in spooks?" "Are you a bible-thumping religious nut?" Yet the fact remains that all attempts to derive mind from the dance of the atoms in the void have failed. So if consciousness is real (and it cannot be denied without self defeat) then some form of dualism must be true. Strawson lays out this argument with clarity and vigor. We may just have to accept "ghosts" in our world. The bible thumping issue is beside the point since the ancient Jews all had a materialist theory of the self. (See First Thessalonians, Ch. 4. Paul thought resurrection would consist of our getting a new body which would enable us to fly through the air like a comic-book super-hero. The idea of the immaterial self was introduced to our literary tradition by Plato, in his dialogue called "The Phaedo", not by anyone writing in the bible.) Anyway Strawson made me feel vindicated after many decades of (often) secretly affirming heretical dualistic views of the mind. If mind exists, and is not caused by the dance of the atoms in the void, then both must have existed since the Big Bang, and a form of Panpsychism must be true after all. The book is structured like a sandwich. There are the first and last essays, which are by Strawson himself. The first essay lays out the basic thesis concerning panpsychism which Strawson defends. The intervening essays are all critical commentaries on Strawson's ideas. The concluding essay is Strawson's reply to his critics and commentators. Strawson's opening and concluding essays, together with the intervening commentaries, provide an intelligible survey of the plausible stances concerning these issues.
J**H
Is panpsychism the answer?
This book is for you if what you are interested in philosophical puzzles about the mind-body problem. The contributors are academics, mostly in philosophy. Definitely not a New Age book.Strawson in the lead essay argues vigorously and with wit that panpsychism does provide the solution to the mind-body problem. Personally, I was persuaded, though I don't regard my opinion as worth much. The 17 other contributors take diverse positions pro and (mostly) con. The contributors assume some background in philosophy generally and the modern Anglo-American style in particular. A reader not comfortable with such terms as "supervenient," "ontological," and "property dualism" would be hard put to follow some of the arguments.The focus is on the mind-body problem. A few passing comments aside, there is nothing about the broader implications if panpsychism is actually true.
M**N
Finally a sane philosopher (...one of the few)
Together with David Pearce (the Hedonistic Imperative guy) and David Chalmers... Strawson is one philosopher of mind that is not completely crazy. He confronts the problem of consciousness and physicalism heads-on... unlike other more famous philosophers who choose the psychotic route of either denying consciousness or speculating about invisible forces that lack empirical validity.
M**T
Five Stars
My daughter used this for her Philosophy dissertation at Southampton University and found it invaluable.....
J**E
Five Stars
Excellent book.
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