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- What are the Mind and the Body?
- The mind-body problem
- History of the mind-body problem
- The ancient world
- The Enlightenment
- The twentieth century
- Now
- Genesis of the modern philosophy of mind
- Defining terms
- Physicalism, mentalism, and dualism
- Scope of physicalism and mentalism
- Irrealism and solipsism
- The term "mind"
- The terms "dream" and "hallucination"
- Theories of Mind
- Where is your mind?
- Physical things must have a location
- Physicalism says the mind is somewhere
- Mind has no physical location
(A 'naive' argument)
- Inaccessibility of other minds
- Counter-arguments to the naive argument
- Do mental sensations exist?
- Brain and mind as two 'aspects'
- Brain and mind as two 'forms'
- Brain and mind as two 'modes'
(The 'cerebroscope argument')
- Mind as an abstraction of brain
- Is the mind informational?
- Spatial location of mental things
- Mental states in overt actions
- Intuitive sense of mental location
- Location by association
- Relative location in perceptual space
- Location of causal connection
- Dissecting conscious nerve tissue
- Is the mind in peripheral nervous tissue?
- Does the mind span divisible brain tissue?
- Mind travelling in divisible brain tissue
- Does the mind span indivisible brain tissue?
- Is the mind a quantum state of the brain?
- Summary
- Minds and computer software
- Abstract automata
- Mental states versus computational states
- Consciousness versus intelligence
- Modern theories of consciousness
- Reduction, emergence, and dualism
- Functionalism and substantism
- Functionalism
- Creeping androidisation
- Integrated whole-brain androidisation
- Shared androidisation
- A mental monist model
- Substantism versus functionalism
- Identity theories
- Identity theories in general
- Type & token identity theories
- Continuum of identity theories
- Against identity theories
- Qualia versus physicalism
- Intentions versus physicalism
- Qualia versus functionalism
- Theories of Reality
- Physicists' world-view
- The physical world is unknowable
- Unknowability of physical facts
- Physical objects as abstractions
- Special features of physical world
- Semantic arguments for physical world
- The brain-in-a-vat experiment
- Truth about the external world
- A question within physics
- A question of phenomenological utility
- A question of literal truth
- Literal truth versus physical truth
- Does the pictorial language-game matter?
- Ryle's spheres of interest
- Scientific progress
- Conclusion
- Berkeley's mental monism
- Summary of Berkeleianism
- 'Idea' and 'idealism': Bennett's critique
- Warnock's critique of Berkeley
- Goswami's 'monistic idealism'
- The Hard Problem
- Self-reference
- Quantum mechanics
- Attitude
- Argument for Mental Monism
- What is this (really) about?
- Mental propositions versus physical propositions
- Mental monism and fictionality
- Justifying the new formulation
- Fictionalism, idealism, and phenomenalism
- Fictional things do not (really) exist
- Reference versus denotation
- What physical assertions (really) refer to
- Intrinsic and contingent fictions
- The physical world is intrinsically fictional
- Summary of the argument
- Corollary: consciousness is not physical
- What are arguments for?
- Style of an argument
- Rigour of an argument
- persuasiveness of an argument
- Conclusion
- Implications of Mental Monism
- Structure of the physical world
- Objectivity of fictions
- Fictional worlds
- Language-games
- Subordination of worlds
- Natural order of physical world
- Structure of the mental world
- Perceptual elements
- Relations of perceptual elements
- Glue and gaps in perceptual fields
- Levels of co-mentality
- Unity of the mental world
- Physical correlates of the mind
- Embodied & disembodied mental activity
- Psychophysical relationships
- Spatial non-specificity of correlates
- Volition
- Volition versus determinism
- Pragmatic refutation of anti-volitionism
- What is causation?
- Random behaviour
- Meaningful random behaviour
- Purposive non-deterministic behaviour
- Feedback in purposive non-determinism
- Speculations
- A Berkeleian Model of the Mind
- The metamind
- Experientia
- Experiential operations
- The metaverse
- Individuation of ordinary minds
- Metamental objects
- Time
- Structure of metamental objects
- Ultimate unity of agency
- How can we talk about the mind?
© Peter B. Lloyd, 1999. Last modified 28th February 2000.
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