(2) If mind is not spatio-temporal, and body is spatio-temporal, then mind and body cannot interact. — quine
What do you mean by asking why it should? — Michael
Because unless the physical is defined as being whatever has causal influence on the physical (a circular and so vacuous definition) then having causal influence on the physical doesn't make you physical (at least not by definition). — Michael
How is dualism necessary?Maybe not if you only consider the interaction problem. But there are other concerns that dualists will claim warrant regarding the mind as non-physical. — Michael
I agree with you if we are talking generally, but people (in my experience, usually dualists) try to use their viewpoint on the mind to defend a viewpoint on something that matters (free will or the existence of non-physical objects). It usually is not argued for intially, but is a careover or a requirment for another belief. — Chany
There is no 'interaction problem.' As Hume noted, even the problem of motion of bodies in different points of space is rationally inexplicable. There is a 'motion problem' just as much as there is an 'interaction problem.' — The Great Whatever
The assumption is that causes and effects occur in space and time. — quine
The assumption is that causes and effects occur in space and time. Descartes defines minds as not being located in space and time. According to Descartes' definition of mind, minds can't be causes or effects. Interactions imply causation. So, Descartes' definition is wrong. In order to explain mind-body interaction, minds must be located in space and time. If minds are located in space and time, then Descartes' definition of mind is false, and dualism is false, too. — quine
Consider: the question of how something material and something non-material can possibly interact seems to presuppose that it is clear how two material things interact. But why can we not equally ask, how is it that two separate things in space, apart from one another, come into interaction? — The Great Whatever
If you say, because we define causality that way, then this is not good enough, for then we can just defined causality so as to include interaction between the mental and physical, seeing as we seem to have so many obvious instances of it, and you beg the question. — The Great Whatever
If a computer is controlling a power station or a refinery, is that "controlling a power station" our abstraction or is it really controlling a power station? — tom
The assumption is that causes and effects occur in space and time. Descartes defines minds as not being located in space and time. According to Descartes' definition of mind, minds can't be causes or effects. Interactions imply causation. So, Descartes' definition is wrong. In order to explain mind-body interaction, minds must be located in space and time. If minds are located in space and time, then Descartes' definition of mind is false, and dualism is false, too. — quine
Descartes' solution is also false. Pineal glands themselves are extended in space and time. Minds that are not extended in space and time cannot be moderated by pineal glands that are extended in space and time. — quine
What do you mean by asking why it should . . . — Michael
The problem is that there's no non-physical account of how anything is supposed to work. — Terrapin Station
Speaking as a physics layman, my understanding is that theorists have been struggling to reconcile QM and relativity, as the theories work well in their own domains, but break down into nonsense when one attempts to integrate the theories (something about crazy infinities popping up all over the place, I think). Given this failure of reconciliation, would it not follow that at least one of theories (QM or relativity) are false (not that something like those theories couldn't be true)?I don't think it fair to say that dualism fails because it hasn't explained how the mind and the body interact. There are a lot of things that physics hasn't explained (which is why we don't have a theory of everything) but it doesn't then follow that it's fair to say that physicalism fails for this reason. — Michael
True. Historically, one of the more annoying responses to empirical demonstrations of some phenomenon is to dismiss it for want of a mechanism (e.g. plate tectonics). However, scientific theories can always be fleshed out by empirical observation and collecting more data. The same is not true of metaphysical theses, which only require thinking one's way to a solution. If, after a few hundred years of substance dualism, no one has yet posited a convincing resolution of the interaction problem, does that justify at least diminished confidence that substance dualism is the correct metaphysical theory of mind?That would be an argument from ignorance.
If, after a few hundred years of substance dualism, no one has yet posited a convincing resolution of the interaction problem, does that justify at least diminished confidence that substance dualism is the correct metaphysical theory of mind? — Arkady
Speaking as a physics layman, my understanding is that theorists have been struggling to reconcile QM and relativity, as the theories work well in their own domains, but break down into nonsense when one attempts to integrate the theories (something about crazy infinities popping up all over the place, I think). Given this failure of reconciliation, would it not follow that at least one of theories (QM or relativity) are false (not that something like those theories couldn't be true)?
Translating this analogy to the thesis of substance dualism, the substance dualist (qua substance dualist) would likely assent to three core propositions:
(1) the mind is res cogitans.
(2) the body is res extensa.
(3) mind and body interact.
Of these three propositions (3) would seem to be on the most secure footing, and is therefore the least likely to be false. So, assuming that the substance dualist cannot dismiss mind/body interaction, and cannot reconcile the interaction problem, does it not follow (in the manner of QM and GR's reconciliatory failure) that (1) and/or (2) must be rejected? And if their (1) or (1) are false, then substance dualism is false.
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