Synopses & Reviews
How are truths about physical and mental states related? Physicalism entails that non-physical truths are redescriptions of a world specifiable in narrowly physical terms. In The Conceptual Link from Physical to Mental Robert Kirk argues that physicalists must therefore hold that the physical truth "logico-conceptually" entails the mental truth: it is impossible for broadly logical and conceptual reasons that the former should have held without the latter. "Redescriptive physicalism" is a fresh approach to the physical-to-mental connection that he bases on these ideas. Contrary to what might have been expected, this connection does not depend on analytic truths: there are holistic but non-analytic conceptual links, explicable by means of functionalism--which, he argues, physicalism entails. Redescriptive physicalism should not be confused with "a priori physicalism": although physicalists must maintain that phenomenal truths are logico-conceptually entailed by physical truths, they must deny that they are also entailed a priori. Kripke-inspired "a posteriori physicalism," on the other hand, is too weak for physicalism, and the psycho-physical identity thesis is not sufficient for it. Though non-reductive, redescriptive physicalism is an excellent basis for dealing with the problems that mental causation raises for other non-reductive views. "Cartesian intuitions" of zombies and transposed qualia may seem to raise irresistible objections; Kirk shows that the intuitions are false. As to the "explanatory gap," there is certainly an epistemic gap, but it has a physicalistically acceptable explanation which deals effectively with the problem of how the physical and functional facts fix particular phenomenal facts.
Review
"This is an excellent and important book. It presents a novel and resourceful conception of physicalism, and defends it with admiral rigor."--Phillip Goff, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
About the Author
Robert Kirk is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at the University of Nottingham. His other books are
Translation Determined (OUP, 1986),
Raw Feeling (OUP, 1994),
Relativism and Reality (Routledge, 1999),
Mind and Body (Acumen, 2003), and
Zombies and Consciousness (OUP, 2005).
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
2. Redescription and logico-conceptual entailment
3. Logico-conceptual entailment and other notions
4. Supervenience
5. Psycho-physical identity and functionalism
6. A posteriori physicalism - but not as we know it
7. A priori versus redescriptive physicalism
8. Redescription, reduction, and mental causation
9. Phenomenal truths are entailed logico-conceptually, but not a priori
10. Against the intuitions - and why it's like this
Bibliography
Index