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- James Bissett Pratt (1936). The Present Status of the Mind-Body Problem. Philosophical Review 45 (2):144-166.
Similar books and articles
Analytical isomorphism is an instance of the demand for a transparent relation between vehicle and content, which is central to the mind-body problem. One can abandon transparency without begging the question with regard to the mind-body problem.
This paper gives an account of Colin McGinn's essay: "Can We Solve the Mind-Body Problem?". McGinn's answer to his own essay title is that the problem is forever beyond us due to the particular nature of our cognitive abilities.The present author offers a number of criticisms of the arguments which support this conclusion.
An old philosophical problem, the mind-body problem, has not been yet solved by philosophers or scientists.
Even if in cognitive neuroscience has been a stunning development in the last 20 years, the mind-body problem
remained unsolved. Even if the majority of researchers in this domain accept the identity theory from an ontological
viewpoint,
many
of
them
reject
this
position
from
an epistemological
viewpoint.
In
this context,
I
consider
that
it
is
quite
possible
the
framework
of
this
problem
to
be
wrong
and
this
is
the
main
reason
the
problem
could not be solved. I offer an alternative, the epistemologically different world’s perspective, which replaces
the world or the universe. In this new context, the mind-body problem becomes a pseudo-problem.
From the Lockean point of view, the mind-body problem is conceived as a problem created by us. It is an error to think there is a problem with mind and body, an error of confusing nominality with reality. I argue that Locke’s agnosticism should be understood as a warning not to confuse our human point of view with what really is. From this perspective, the mind-body problem is a nominal problem, not a real one. It appears to us as a problem, but is not really so. But what makes it appear to us as a problem? This is Locke’s starting point for solving the mind-body problem.
The mind-body problem concerns the relationship between mind and body, or nowadays - between mind or consciousness and the brain. As a relationship, this can be viewed from two perspectives: from body to mind and from mind to body. In this note I point out that the two readings of the problem are not symmetrical and that there are categorical differences between them. In particular, whereas the body to mind problem constitutes a mystery (cf. the contemporary hard problem), the mind to body problem may be approached from a psychological (as contrasted with philosophical) orientation that allows for concrete phenomenological investigation.
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