A 50TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION OF ONE OF THE MOST WIDELY INFLUENTIAL
ARTICLES OF 20TH CENTURY PHILOSOPHY?Consciousness is what makes the
mind-body problem really intractable.? So begins Thomas Nagel's
classic 1974 essay ?What is it Like to be a Bat?? Nagel's essay
initiated the now widespread attention to consciousness as a central
problem for philosophy, psychology, and neuroscience; it also
influenced the recognition of the consciousness of nonhuman creatures
as an important subject of study. Nagel argued that the essential
subjectivity of conscious experience--what it is like for the creature
undergoing it--means that reductionist theories of mind, which attempt
to analyze it in physical terms, can never succeed. It follows that
the physical sciences cannot provide a complete description of
reality, and that the physical conception of objective reality must be
transcended if science is going to comprehend the mind. This edition
reissues this classic and widely influential article on its 50th
anniversary, along with a new preface discussing the origins and
influence of the essay, as well as ?Further Thoughts: The
Psychophysical Nexus,? a supplementary essay which describes Nagel's
later thoughts about how to respond to the problem posed by ?What Is
It Like to Be a Bat?? This second essay suggests that the most
promising path forward for the mind-body problem, if one accepts the
irreducible subjectivity of consciousness, is to seek a necessary
connection between mental and neurophysiogical states through a more
fundamental type of state which is neither mental nor physical but
necessitates them both as essential aspects. In other words, a state
that is physical from the outside and mental from the inside, just as
we are. This would be a form of monism, requiring the formation of new
concepts, since our present concepts of the mental and the physical do
not entail such a necessary connection. The essay explains why the
relation between the mental and the physical may be necessary, even
though our present concepts make it appear contingent.
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ISBN
9780197752814
Publisert
2024
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
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