The Mind in Nature
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 22 November 2007
- ISBN 9780199234103
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages242 pages
- Size 223x145x16 mm
- Weight 421 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
What are the most fundamental features of the world? Do minds stand outside the natural order? Is a unified picture of mental and physical reality possible? The Mind in Nature provides a staunchly realist account of the world as a unified system incorporating both the mental and the physical.
MoreLong description:
What are the most fundamental features of the world? Do minds stand outside the natural order? Is a unified picture of mental and physical reality possible? The Mind in Nature provides a staunchly realist account of the world as a unified system incorporating both the mental and the physical. C. B. Martin, an original and influential exponent of 'ontologically serious' metaphysics, echoes Locke's dictum that 'all things that exist are only particulars', and argues that properties are powerful qualities. He also spells out the implications of this view for philosophical conceptions of causation, intentionality, consciousness, and the mind-body problem.
Martin emphasizes the importance of non-conscious 'vegetative' systems, which provide clear examples of intentionality in the form of representational use. The slide from representational use to consciousness involves a change in the material of use, but not the form of representation. A concluding chapter provides an argument for the view that an ontology of particular substances and properties leads ineluctably to monism: the bus we board with Locke takes us directly to the world of Spinoza and Einstein. Along the way, we are led to understand the nature of minds and conscious states of mind in a way that avoids both reductionism (the idea that mental is reducible to the non-mental) and dualism (the idea that mental substances or properties differ dramatically from physical substances and properties).
Worth reading, as the presently only available survey of Martin's deeply interesting world-view.
Table of Contents:
Preface
Introduction
Dispositions and Conditionals
Truthmakers and Disposition Lines: From Quark to Colleague
Parts and Wholes
Causality
The Road to Pythagoreanism and Back
Linguisticism and Pythagoreanism
Protolanguage
Use, Representational Use, and Content
Emergence, Reduction, and Mental Chauvanism
Dispositional Systems
Two Jokes Explained
Tactile-Motor-Kinaesthetic Perception
Verbal Imagery
Mind in Nature: A New View of the Mind
Warps and Woof of Einstein
References
Index