Mind, Consciousness, and Free Will
Mind, Consciousness, and Free Will作者机构:Department of Philosophy University of Waterloo Waterloo ON N2L 3G 1 Canada
出 版 物:《Frontiers of Philosophy in China》 (中国哲学前沿(英文版))
年 卷 期:2018年第13卷第3期
页 面:377-393页
学科分类:01[哲学] 0601[历史学-考古学] 0101[哲学-哲学] 060305[历史学-专门史与整体史] 06[历史学] 060109[历史学-专门考古] 010108[哲学-科学技术哲学] 0603[历史学-世界史]
主 题:cognitive science consciousness free will intuition materialism mind philosophy science
摘 要:This commentary discusses how philosophy and science can collaborate to understand the human mind, considering dialogues involving three philosophers and three cognitive scientists. Their topics include the relation of philosophy and science, the nature of mind, the problem of consciousness, and the existence of free will. I argue that philosophy is more general and normative than science, but they are interdependent. Philosophy can build on the cognitive sciences to develop a theory of mind I call "multilevel materialism," which integrates molecular, neural, mental, and social mechanisms. Consciousness is increasingly being understood as resulting from neural mechanisms. Scientific advances make the traditional concept of free will implausible, but "freeish" will is consistent with new theories of decision making and action resulting from brain processes. Philosophers should work closely with scientists to address profound problems about knowledge, reality, and values.