Brute Facts
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 1 November 2018
- ISBN 9780198758600
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages284 pages
- Size 238x164x23 mm
- Weight 584 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
Brute facts are facts that don't have explanations. They are instrumental in our attempts to give accounts of other facts or phenomena, and so they play a key role in many philosophers' views about the structure of the world. This volume explores neglected questions about the nature of brute facts and their explanatory role.
MoreLong description:
Brute facts are facts that don't have explanations. Such facts appear in our explanations, inform many people's views about the structure of the world, and are part of philosophical interpretations in metaphysics and the philosophy of science. Yet, despite the considerable literature on explanation, the question of bruteness has been left largely unexamined. The chapters in Brute Facts address this gap in academic thought by exploring the central considerations which surround this topic. How can we draw a distinction between facts that can reasonably be thought of as brute and facts for which further explanation is possible? Can we explain something and gain understanding by appealing to brute facts? Is naturalism inconsistent with the existence of (non-physical) brute facts? Can modal facts be brute facts? Are emergent facts brute? This volume brings together contributions by authors who offer different answers to these questions. In presenting a range of different viewpoints on these matters, Brute Facts engages with major debates in contemporary philosophy concerning modality, naturalism, consciousness, reduction and explanation.
a comprehensive introduction as well as thoughtfully relevant ... contributions knitting together the various expert critical responses to the existence and use of brute facts ... Recommended.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
Must there be brute facts?
How to make the case for brute facts
Bruteness and supervenience: mind vs. morality
Brute necessity and the mind body problem
Are modal facts brute facts?
Truthmaking and the mysteries of emergence
Are there brute facts about consciousness?
The Provenance of Consciousness
Brute facts about emergence
There is nothing (really) wrong with emergent brute facts
Emergence: inexplicable but explanatory
Naturalism, emergence, and brute facts
Emergence, downward determination and brute facts in biological systems