1 / 14

Chapter 10: What am I?

Chapter 10: What am I?. Introduction. What does the word I refer to? Mind-body problem – What are the mind and body, and how are they related to each other? Dualistic theories hold that the mind and body are two different substances

makani
Download Presentation

Chapter 10: What am I?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 10: What am I?

  2. Introduction • What does the word I refer to? • Mind-body problem – What are the mind and body, and how are they related to each other? • Dualistic theories hold that the mind and body are two different substances • Interactionism – causal relationship between mind and body; mental events can cause physical events • Parallelism – A physical event occurs, and parallel to that event, but uncaused by it, a mental event occurs • Epiphenomenalism – mental events are by-products of physical events

  3. Introduction • Monistic solutions to the mind-body problem deny that the mind and body are two different substances • Identity theory – mental events are identical with brain processes in much the same way as lightening flashes are identical with electrical discharges • Idealism reduces matter to mind • Double-aspect theory – mind and body should be thought of as qualities, characteristics, or aspects • Neutral monism – view that what exists is neither mental nor physical but neutral

  4. You are Your Mind • Descartes believed that physical objects exist outside our minds • He believed that he existed because he thought • Believed in the existence of a perfectly good God • Material things are essentially different from mental things • The mind exists as a mental substance

  5. Meditation VIRené Descartes • Establishes mind-body dualism and supports interactionism. The mind causally interacts with the body. • The essence of a person is that they are a thinking thing (mind or soul) • The person is distinct from the body, which is an extended and unthinking thing • Body is divisible, but mind is indivisible

  6. You Are an Embodied Self • How can an immaterial substance that is nonspatial cause a material substance (the spatial body) to do anything? • If the mind can act on physical bodies, it contradicts the law of the conservation of energy • Can human behavior be explained in physical terms according to the activity of the brain?

  7. Body, Mind, and GenderEve Browning Cole • Critiques Descartes from a feminist philosophy • Argues that Descartes’ pays insufficient attention to the fact that self is embodied and exists in a network of relations to others • Descartes’ ideas have reinforced masculine notion of self as autonomous, detached, and dominant over matter

  8. You Are a Computing Machine • What if our conscious life is the result of a particular pattern of rules (software) being imposed on fixed structures (hardware)? • Behaviorism – materialistic theory of the mind; so-called mental events are the same thing as behaviors or dispositions to behave

  9. Computing the MindBruce H. Hinrichs • Argues that the brain, which creates the mind, is a computing machine • The brain is a computer in that it is a computational device • How does the brain create a mind? • The mind is a property or quality of the brain • The scientific answer would examine the physical activities of the brain that create a mental experience • The brain is a physical thing in the natural world, but the mind is personal experiences produced when brains are in a state of awareness of their own functioning

  10. You Are Not a Machine • Can computers have consciousness? • Functionalism – mental states are defined completely by their functions or causal relations • “the mind is to the brain as a computer’s software is to its hardware” • The behavior of the computer is not explained by it’s physics and chemistry (hardware)

  11. Can Computers Think?John Searle • Argues that machines cannot think (be conscious) and thus, by implication, that functionalistic theories of the mind fail • The Chinese room argument – shows that computers will never be able to produce consciousness and hence the human brain must be significantly unlike a computer because the brain can cause consciousness • Computers manipulate symbols according to syntax, or a set of rules, but that does not mean that they understand the meaning (semantics) of the symbols

  12. Can Computers Think?John Searle • Premises: • Brains cause minds • Syntax is not sufficient for semantics • Computer programs are entirely defined by their formal, or syntactical structure • Minds have mental, semantic contents • Conclusions: • No computer program by itself can give a system a mind • The way that brain functions cause minds cannot be solely in virtue of running a computer program • If anything other than the brain caused the mind, it would have to have causal powers equivalent to the brain • Any artifact we might build would have to have powers equivalent to the brain in order to produce equivalent mental states

  13. You Are Meat • What if intelligent, conscious, and feeling robots visited earth. Would they be amazed that flesh and blood humans can think, feel, and communicate?

  14. They’re Made Out of MeatTerry Bisson • Science fiction in which robots visit a planet to study creatures that have been sending radio messages into outer space

More Related