How do you know you have a mind? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

How do you know you have a mind?

Description:

Distinguish between what people mean by mind' and body' ... A plan' for the termite mound is not held by any individual termite. psychlotron.org.uk ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:18
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 16
Provided by: SamM45
Category:
Tags: know | mind | termite

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: How do you know you have a mind?


1
  • How do you know you have a mind?
  • How do you know the person next to you has a
    mind?
  • What is a mind?

psychlotron.org.uk
2
Today we will
  • Examine the mind-body problem
  • Distinguish between what people mean by mind
    and body
  • Discuss some different approaches to the
    mind-body relationship including
  • Cartesian dualism
  • Materialism (mind-brain identity)
  • Emergentism

psychlotron.org.uk
3
  • What is the difference between brain and
    mind?

Third person ontology A person is a body with a
brain that behaves in particular ways
First person ontology I have sensations,
thoughts, feelings, intentions
psychlotron.org.uk
4
Mental states
  • Are conscious
  • They involve a subjective experience of thinking,
    perceiving, imagining etc.
  • Are private
  • They are not open to inspection by anyone other
    than the person who has them
  • Have intentionality
  • Are always about something

psychlotron.org.uk
5
The mind-body problem
  • How can we account for the existence of both
    first and third-person ontologies?
  • How can a thing have a point of view? (Dennett,
    2005)

psychlotron.org.uk
6
Cartesian dualism
  • Rene Descartes (1641)

Physical Mechanistic
Non-physical Free-willed
psychlotron.org.uk
7
Cartesian dualism
  • Is it possible for something non-physical to
    affect something physical?
  • Is it legitimate to use the action of God in a
    solution to the mind-body problem?

psychlotron.org.uk
8
Materialism
  • Mind-brain identity theory
  • Mental states are brain states. Brain activity
    is necessary and sufficient to explain mental
    activity (Place, 1956).

psychlotron.org.uk
9
Materialism
  • What evidence can we put forward to support the
    view that mental states are brain states?

psychlotron.org.uk
10
Materialism
  • What does the materialist view imply about free
    will?
  • If we provide a complete account of the brain
    processes that give rise to consciousness, will
    the mind-body problem have been solved?

psychlotron.org.uk
11
Emergentism
Water molecule
psychlotron.org.uk
12
Emergentism
psychlotron.org.uk
13
Emergentism
Conscious experience
An individual neurone is not conscious, but
100,000,000,000 neurones interacting in certain
ways may give rise to consciousness as an
emergent property
psychlotron.org.uk
14
  • An emergentist is just a dualist who is too
    embarrassed to use the word soul.
  • Discuss.

psychlotron.org.uk
15
  • Yes, we have a soul. But it is made of lots of
    tiny robots. (Dennett, 2005)

psychlotron.org.uk
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com