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Title: Todays Lecture


1
Todays Lecture
  • A comment about your Third Assignment and final
    Paper
  • Preliminary comments on Functionalism
  • Hilary Putnam

2
A comment about your Third Assignment and final
Paper
  • Im going to take the long weekend to grade your
    Third Assignments.
  • I am giving you a bonus day of grace to get your
    final Paper in to me.
  • Three things to note about this proposal
  • (1) It means that IF you get your paper to me, or
    the assignment drop box, by 400 p.m. on August
    11th, THEN you will not receive any late
    penalties for your paper.
  • (2) This extra day of grace only applies to your
    Paper.
  • (3) Technically, this does not change the due
    date for the paper (which remains August 8th).

3
Third in-class quiz
  • Do remember that due to my oversight in not
    giving a third in-class quiz, and what I imagine
    would have been your stellar performance in
    answering whatever question I would have asked,
    each of you have received an automatic 2 out of
    2 for that quiz that wasnt.

4
Preliminary comments on Functionalism
  • Mind-Brain Identity Theory contends that types of
    mental states are nothing more than types of
    brain states.
  • Functionalism contends that an internal state of
    an individual counts as a type of mental state if
    it performs the relevant causal role, in relation
    to other states of the central nervous system or
    non-neuronal physiological processes, and is
    causally efficacious in contributing to the
    subsequent behavior of the organism that
    possesses it (see FP, p.391).

5
Preliminary comments on Functionalism
  • What would be an example of a claim made by a
    Mind-Brain Identity Theorist?
  • The most famous is the claim that Pain is the
    firing of c-fibers.
  • It doesnt matter what c-fibers are, just think
    of a particular area of the brain associated with
    pain and replace the reference to c-fibers with
    that.
  • What the Mind-Brain Identity Theorist is claiming
    here is that pain is a physical state, in
    particular a physical state of the brain, or
    central nervous system (see FP, p.411).

6
Preliminary comments on Functionalism
  • This claim is likened to the claim that Heat is
    mean molecular kinetic energy (see FP, p.426).
  • Heat, that is, is nothing more than mean
    molecular kinetic energy. Of course this cant be
    quite right, but the point is relatively clear.
  • Pain, for the Mind-Brain Identity Theorist is,
    consequently, a publicly observable event. Though
    the feeling of pain is still in some important
    sense private, the actual ontic entity is not.
  • Thus, if Mind-Brain Identity Theory is right, we
    would have a way around the problem of other
    minds.

7
Preliminary comments on Functionalism
  • Mind-Brain Identity Theory is a way of moving
    beyond some of the deficiencies of either Logical
    or Metaphysical Behaviorism.
  • Metaphysical Behaviorism, remember, reduces
    mental states to dispositions to act. Logical
    Behaviorism, remember, reduces talk of mental
    states to talk of dispositions to act.

8
Preliminary comments on Functionalism
  • Neither kind of Behaviorism seems to deal well
    with, among other things, claims of sensation.
  • Consider the claim Im in pain. This is not
    merely, as Metaphysical Behaviorists would have
    us believe, a kind of pain behavior, akin to a
    yelp or wince (see FP, p.409 for Smarts
    discussion of this point). There is something it
    is like to be in pain. It is, or involves, a
    feeling.
  • Mind-Brain Identity Theorists do not see this as
    a good enough reason to re-embrace Cartesian
    Dualism after all there are other, equally
    difficult problems with Cartesian Dualism (see
    Ryles discussion of some of these problems in
    your readings).

9
Preliminary comments on Functionalism
  • Nor will Mind-Brain Identity Theorists embrace a
    Property Dualism, where consciousness is a
    non-physical property produced by the brain.
  • Their reluctance in this regard is harder to
    justify or motivate. It may be best explained by
    their commitment to (metaphysical) Materialism or
    Physicalism.
  • For example Smart, in his essay, claims that
    sensations, states of consciousness, do seem to
    be the one sort of thing left outside the
    physicalist picture, and for various reasons I
    just cannot believe that this can be so. The
    above is largely a confession of faith (FP,
    p.410).

10
Preliminary comments on Functionalism
  • It could also be the case that Property Dualism
    reintroduces problems of interactionism, albeit
    at more localized areas of the brain than is
    true for Cartesian Dualism.

11
Preliminary comments on Functionalism
  • Functionalism was developed to compensate for the
    perceived deficiencies of Mind-Brain Identity
    Theory.
  • Though also a Physicalist theory of mind,
    functionalism seems to be better equipped to
    accommodate kinds of minds that it seems possible
    to conceive exist albeit in individuals who do
    not possess central nervous systems (e.g.
    androids, Deities, angels, perhaps clouds of
    interstellar gas, et cetera).

12
Preliminary comments on Functionalism
  • Do note, however, that a rejection of type-type
    Mind-Brain Identity Theory does not require one
    to reject a type-token Mind-Brain Identity
    theory. In a type-token Identity Theory, mental
    states are, in the case of humans and other
    terrestrial animals, identical to actual states
    in the relevant central nervous systems, though
    they may be instantiated in very different
    biological systems or forms of life (i.e. that
    lack central nervous systems).

13
Preliminary comments on Functionalism
  • Hilary Putnams Functionalism is known as Machine
    Functionalism. His theoretical model for
    understanding mind is the Turing Machine (Ill
    explain this in a second). This is, however, not
    the only kind of Functionalist Theory of Mind.
  • Teleological Functionalism is the view that
    mental states are individuated based on their
    function, purpose, or role in the mental system.
    Put crudely, to have a certain belief about your
    environment is to have a neurophysiological state
    that contains information about that aspect of
    the environment as a part of its function in, or
    its place in the design of, the
    neurophysiological processes and mechanisms
    responsible for processing incoming data from the
    bodys various receptors and then producing a(n
    appropriate) behavioral response.

14
Preliminary comments on Functionalism
  • Homuncular Functionalism sees the mind broken up
    into sub-components with particular functions to
    play in the overall mental system, with each
    sub-component itself broken up into yet smaller
    components with their own particular functions in
    the overall design of the system. These
    sub-components work together to process incoming
    data from the bodys receptors and produce a(n
    appropriate) behavioral response. Each component
    is individuated based on its role in the mental
    system.
  • The brain is construed, under this account, as a
    physical system made up of sub-components that
    can be mapped onto the hierarchy of control
    present in the proposed mental system.

15
Preliminary comments on Functionalism
  • Hilary Putnams Functionalist Theory of Mind is
    often referred to as Machine Functionalism. It is
    so named because Putnam likens the mind to a
    Turing Machine ... the mind, under this account,
    is a complex computational device.

16
Preliminary comments on Functionalism
  • A Turing Machine is a really simple computational
    device ... its also an abstract computational
    device (you cant go and pick one up at your
    local computer store).
  • Imagine that a Turing Machine travels along an
    infinite paper tape. This tape is divided up into
    squares containing symbols from a finite alphabet
    or symbol system. What the Turing Machine does is
    either move forwards, backwards, erase the symbol
    on a given square of tape, write a symbol on a
    given square of type or change its internal state
    relative to its current input (the square on the
    tape it is currently reading) and its current
    internal state (which is a readiness state that
    consists of a rule that instructs the Machine in
    what it must do relative to its input) (see FP,
    p.421).

17
Preliminary comments on Functionalism
  • For Putnam, the mind is relevantly similar to a
    Turing Machine in that it too is responsive to
    input, and relative to the internal states it is
    currently in, will respond to that input in one
    of a finite set of ways.
  • A individuated mental state, according to Machine
    Functionalism, is a contributing factor to the
    overall internal state of an individual that is
    itself, as a whole, functionally equivalent to
    the internal state of a Turing Machine.
  • No one mental state is functionally equivalent to
    the internal state of a Turing Machine (see
    Baileys discussion of this on pages 422-23 of
    your FP).

18
Hilary Putnam
  • Hilary Putnam was born in 1926 and died really
    recently (Ill look up the date).
  • He worked in, among other things, metaphysics
    (particularly philosophy of mind), philosophy of
    science and philosophy of language.
  • Though he is famous for first proposing
    Functionalism as a Theory of Mind, he has also
    contributed a great deal to philosophical
    analyses of linguistic meaning and reference, and
    to the debate over whether we can sensibly talk
    of theory-independent truth (see FP, pp.419-20).

19
The Nature of Mental States I
  • This section of Putnams paper clarifies what he
    means by identity.
  • Putnam rejects the view that the identity claim
    being A is being B (FP, p.425) must (1) arise
    from the meanings of the terms A and B and
    (2) must be philosophically informative by
    yielding a reductive analysis of one thing into
    another, more ontologically basic or primitive,
    thing (FP, p.425).

20
The Nature of Mental States I
  • Putnam is rejecting, first, that identity claims
    must be analytic. He thinks that we can make
    philosophically informative identity claims about
    things in the world based on experience (believe
    or not some philosophers find this claim
    contentious) (FP, p.426). He also thinks that, to
    proffer a philosophically informative identity
    claim, you need not seek a reductive analysis
    (FP, p.427).

21
The Nature of Mental States I
  • The primary point Putnam seems to be making in
    this section is that the identity claims of
    Mind-Brain Identity Theory can be legitimately
    assessed using empirical data, and should be
    primarily assessed using empirical data (FP,
    pp.427-28).

22
The Nature of Mental States II
  • Putnam opens up this section with two important
    claims (1) Pain is not a brain state and (2)
    there is another empirical hypothesis of mind
    that does a better job of accommodating what we
    know of the mind than Mind-Brain Identity Theory
    (FP, p.428).
  • Putnam suggests that pain, or the state of being
    in pain, is a functional state of the whole
    organism (FP, p.428).

23
The Nature of Mental States II
  • Two things of note here (1) Though the input
    receptors and motor output processes or
    mechanisms are specifiable in the individuals to
    whom we ascribe minds, or mental states, (2) the
    mental states are not to be thought of as
    (actually) realized as individual physical or
    physiological states in (the central nervous
    systems of) the relevant individuals (FP, p.428).

24
The Nature of Mental States II
  • For any given minded organism or individual, we
    have any number of possible models or
    interpretations (i.e. Machine Tables) of that
    organisms mind.
  • A Machine Table, remember, contains a list of
    possible (overall) internal states (of readiness)
    that an individual can possess, and instructions
    for what it will do relative to both its current
    state and the received input (see Baileys
    discussion of a Machine Table on page 421 of your
    FP).

25
The Nature of Mental States II
  • Each model or interpretation provides a way of
    understanding and predicting the behavior of the
    relevant individual relative to the received
    inputs and motor outputs (i.e. behavior).
  • There is no concern in this approach to specify
    how the internal states (of readiness), and the
    instructions for what the individual will
    probably now do relative to the received data and
    its current (overall) state (of readiness), are
    physically realized in that individual (FP,
    p.428).

26
The Nature of Mental States II
  • The empirical hypothesis that being in pain is a
    functional state of the relevant individual is
    broken down in the following way
  • (1) The relevant individuals, who is capable of
    feeling pain, are Probabilistic Automata (FP,
    p.428) or Turing Machines (FP, p.428).
  • (2) The relevant individual, who is capable of
    feeling pain, possesses a Description of a
    certain kind (i.e. can be understood using a
    particular Machine Table) (FP, p.428).
  • (3) The relevant individual, who is capable of
    feeling pain, is not composed of parts that
    themselves have Descriptions (FP, p.429).

27
The Nature of Mental States II
  • (4) For the relevant individual spoken of in (2),
    she can be said to be in pain if, in a
    Description applicable to her, there is a subset
    of the sensory inputs such that she ... is in
    pain when and only when some of her ... sensory
    inputs are in that subset (FP, p.429).

28
The Nature of Mental States II
  • Putnam adds that the relevant individual (i)
    Must be able to learn from experience, (ii) has
    preferences for certain internal states, (iii)
    has receptors that alert the individual to damage
    to its physical body and (iv) that the sensory
    input subsets associated with pain rank low in
    the list of the preferences mentioned in (ii)
    (FP, p.429).

29
The Nature of Mental States III and IV
  • In these next sections Putnam considers and
    rejects Mind-Brain Identity Theory and
    Behaviorism as competing hypotheses to his
    Machine Functionalism.

30
The Nature of Mental States III
  • Note that Putnams Machine Functionalism is not
    incompatible with Dualism and that both the input
    states and over all internal states (of
    readiness) are not physical per se (FP, p.429).
  • He contrasts these features of his theory with
    that of Mind-Brain Identity Theory (FP,
    pp.429-30).
  • Do note that Putnam is not disavowing physicalism
    here. Its just that, even if his metaphysics
    turns out to be false, his theory of mind may
    still survive.

31
The Nature of Mental States III
  • Problems facing the Mind-Brain Identity Theorist
  • (1) They must specify the kind of
    physical-chemical state that is pain such that,
    for any given individual who is in pain, she has
    the right kind of central nervous system and is
    in that right physical-chemical state. This
    doesnt seem so bad until you realize that the
    Mind-Brain Identity Theorist must have an
    analysis that is applicable to every individual
    who can feel pain, be they mammals, reptiles,
    cephalopods, or extra-terrestrials AND not be
    applicable to those individuals who cant feel
    pain (FP, p.430).

32
The Nature of Mental States III
  • (2) The Mind-Brain Identity Theorist is not just
    limiting their focus to pain states...their
    theory applies to all psychological states (or
    mental states). The Mind-Brain Identity Theory
    will fail, then, if there is only one case of two
    individuals possessing a similar psychological
    state while differing in the physical makeup of
    their respective central nervous systems. Putnam
    thinks it is highly probable that this will be
    true somewhere in the universe (FP, p.430).

33
The Nature of Mental States III
  • The perceived edge in favor of Putnams Machine
    Functionalism
  • We ascribe mental states such as pain based on
    the similarities of behavior across species. The
    analogues that ground the ascription of such
    mental states across species are much more likely
    to evince similarities in the functional
    organization of the relevant species members
    than in their respective central nervous systems
    (FP, pp.430-31).

34
The Nature of Mental States IV
  • Metaphysical Behaviorism appears to have an
    important advantage over Mind-Brain Identity
    Theory and Machine Functionalism. Because,
    according to the Metaphysical Behaviorist, being
    in pain consists of possessing a disposition to
    behave in a certain way, it appears to coincide
    with how we ascribe pain to another (e.g. by
    observing how they behave, rather than knowing
    either the particular brain states they are
    currently in, or their functional organization)
    (FP, p.431).

35
The Nature of Mental States IV
  • But this, argues Putnam, is only an apparent
    advantage. All that is needed for either
    Mind-Brain Identity Theory or Machine
    Functionalism to succeed is for the relevant
    markers of pain used by either theorist (to
    ascribe pain) to be reliable indicators of the
    relevant state or property of the individual in
    question (FP, p.431).

36
The Nature of Mental States IV
  • Problems facing Metaphysical Behaviorism
  • (1) They need to properly specify the relevant
    behavioral dispositions for the relevant
    psychological state without appealing to the very
    state itself (FP, p.431).
  • (2) It seems conceivable to imagine two
    individuals, one being in pain while the other is
    not in pain, exhibiting relevantly similar
    behavior (FP, p.432).
  • (3) It seems more plausible to explain behavior
    with reference to internal causally efficacious
    psychological states than to identify said states
    with the behavior itself (FP, p.432).
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