No real project, just an interest in feasible alternatives to monisms and dualisms in the philosophy of mind. — jkg20
I'm trying to think of a simpler way to sum it up. So from a philosophy of mind point of view, monism would say either all is physics or all is mind.
Physical monism has to then invoke epiphenomenalism, eliminativism, or other arguments that explain away the rather primary fact what we do experience the world. Consciousness remains a thing.
Idealist monism then says all is mind, but has to find ways to account for the fact the physical world also appears to remain a thing.
Dualism is thus always lurking in the monistic approaches. Unless we are willing to just be eliminativist, or just be idealist, we are stuck with a fundamental dichotomy of some kind. And so we might say there are two kinds of stuff (as in Cartesianism), or matter has two inherent aspects (as in panpsychism).
Triadicism - as in Hegelian dialectics, or the tradition of the Unity of Opposites generally - says fine. We can't get away from the fact that Nature always seems to divide into its poles of being. This has been the story for metaphysics on every question ever asked.
Is reality deterministic or probabilistic, stasis or flux, form or matter, discrete or continuous, one or many, part or whole, organic or mechanical, etc, etc? We always end up being pulled strongly in two opposite directions when we try to drill down to the fundamental.
A triadic way of thinking then takes that familiar fact and turns it back on itself to say that this then tells us Nature is the product of emergent process, of systematic structure. A synthesis or unity of the opposites.
The oppositions are instead complementary states of being. Each is related to its other by a reciprocal or inverse relation. Continuity is measured by the degree to which it is not discrete. And the discrete to the degree it is a lack of the continuous.
So a metaphysical-strength dichotomy is not reality split into dualistic halves. It is reality becoming divided towards the opposing limits of the possible. And then the actuality of reality is that which now stands as the third thing - the relation that is defined by that complementary state of affairs.
A metaphysical contrast has been produced. And now a spectrum of states inbetween two bounding extremes has been revealed.
Triadicism is thus this general way of thinking. It arrives at the desired goal of a unity - a "monism" - by accepting the inevitability of duality and showing how dichotomies are what actually allow a world of complex relations.
Simplicity is arrived at not by identifying the right fundamental substance (ie: matter or mind), but by accepting that all existence is based on the irreducibly triadic logic of a systematic relation.
This is the Peircean point. He showed how it was a logically irreducible relation. He showed how to put an end to substance-based ontology and move on with the holism of a triadic relational model.
Now we come to applying that triadicism to the problem of mind specifically.
The problem becomes to identity the right dualism - the one that is complementary in a fashion that can result in a formal unity. And following the lead of biology, neurology can also view the two halves of this whole as a semiotic interaction between information and dynamics. Physics controlled by symbols. A modelling relation.
So life and mind are made part of a continuum. But also, the steps in terms of the semiotic machinery - from genes, to neurons, to words - are pretty major divisions.
What persists all the way through a full-on triadic metaphysics is the agreement that all reality is founded on the logical irreducibility of a triadic, or systematic, or hierarchical, relation. The only monism that makes sense is one based on a unity of opposites. And dualism simply speaks to the fact that opposites must arise so as to construct that unity as an actualised state of being.
To wrap it up, we have to wind up having something concrete to say about qualia, the explanatory gap, the feeling of what it is like to be conscious, the ineffability of experience, the reality of freewill, etc. All the usual problematic that obsesses folk.
My position there is that neurobiology explains "consciousness" fairly straightforwardly at a neural level. The brain models the world from a selfish organismic perspective. It is no surprise that such an elaborate exercise in modelling would feel like something. It would feel exactly like being a self in pragmatic and regulating interaction with a world.
Life embodies that interaction between information and dynamics. Genes are a model of the body. And a regulation of metabolism is that body getting made.
The nervous system allows the organism to then extend that regulation of physics out into the environment. Neurons encode our surrounds in terms of its physical potentials and effects. That way we can weave them into our ongoing state of being.
But humans then have the further social level of semiosis that comes with language. And this is where the social construction of the human mind kicks in. We don't just nakedly experience the world through our own eyes. We learn to see ourselves as others see us. We learn to see ourselves as "selves", with "consciousness", and "freewill", and "qualia", and "spirit", and "thoughts".
A further categorisation is forced upon us in a sharp distinction between the objective reality "out there" and the subjective reality "in here".
An animal mind just lives in its world. And that world is a semiotic umwelt. It is essentially a subjective world - the world as the animal learns to construct it for itself.
But humans - for functional social reasons - learn to distance themselves from their subjective umwelts. We are taught to regard our perceptions as veridical representations of the actual world (especially once backed up by the mathematically encoded ideas of science
:grin: ). And then by the same token, see even our selves as split off into their own metaphysically objective sphere of being. The ghost in the machine. The spirit or res cogitans.
A crazy dualistic metaphysics gets invented as a cultural meme. But this dichotomy exists because it is pragmatically useful. It becomes the basis for a new level of social complexity. Human societies could get organised so that information now regulates physics as agriculture and then technology.
So the argument here is that we find ourself with all this philosophy of mind dualistic bullshit. The neurobiologist has to wonder why wider society is so stuck on humans being lodged halfway between the animal and the divine. Yet the reason why the basic problems of philosophy of mind persist is that it is functionally necessary for humans to think that way about themselves. It has become the basis for the modern technological way of life and the romantic reaction that that mindset must engender as the "complementary balance".
The scientific revolution was the birth of a still further level of semiosis - one based on number. We learnt to view the world as objectively a machine. And that was an excellent way to think about reality. It led to the industrial revolution pretty smartly. Engineering was the way to unlock the vast resources of buried fossil fuels. Life's story - information regulating physics - could vault to a whole new scale of being.
But if all physical reality is a machine (and no longer the Aristotlean notion of a holistic, triadic, system) then now "the mind" becomes a real ontological problem. There is no longer any place in this imagined objective world for the other half of things. So that has to now have its own spiritual realm ... or something.
Anyway. My point is that a triadic perspective is logically basic. Peirce in particular showed how complexity is irreducible. We can't actually arrive at something simpler, such as a dualism or monism.
And this same demonstration that reality has a triadic irreducibility was there in Aristotle or even Anaximander. It remains the key thing linking modern systems theorists - the hierarchy guys, the cyberneticians, the neural networkers, the condensed matter physicists, the biologists and ecologists, the enactive psychologists, the social constructionists and semioticians, etc, etc.
But culturally we remain mired in the wrangles between realists and idealists, monists and dualists, because that is a functional viewpoint for modern society. Not because they are real scientific problems.
It is easy to see how the dualist framing arises as a meme with social payback. It constructs the individual as "a free agent" operating in a liberal "open market". New levels of "world construction" and "physics regulation" can flow from such a mindset.
And of course that then brings its discontents. There is the Romantic backlash that asks "is that all there is"?
So a mathematical level of semiosis feels rather dysfunctional in fact for us humans. We no longer feel so seamlessly embedded in our world in terms of our latest version of a socially constructed level of "consciousness".
From a philosophy of mind perspective, there is thus something actually worth talking about. What can we learn from the earlier grades of semiosis - genes, neurons, words - to make better sense of this latest transition to a numerical interaction with nature?
But fat chance while philosophy of mind generally fails to move past the simplicities of monism and dualism, realism and idealism.
:meh: