The Nature of Mind according to David M. Armstrong · The Nature of Mind according to David M....

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The Nature of Mindaccording to David M. Armstrong

PHIL 100w (Introduction to Knowledge and Reality)

Nicolas FillionDept. of Philosophy and Dept. of Applied Mathematics

The University of Western Ontario

Simon Fraser University25 February 2013

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Origins of the discussion

What is the nature of the mind?

mind

having a perceptionhaving sensations

having beliefs

having thoughts

having purposes

having desires

So, the question ‘what is mind?’ is associated with

what is it to perceive?

what is it to have emotions?

etc.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Origins of the discussion

What is the nature of the mind?

mind

having a perceptionhaving sensations

having beliefs

having thoughts

having purposes

having desires

So, the question ‘what is mind?’ is associated with

what is it to perceive?

what is it to have emotions?

etc.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Origins of the discussion

What is the nature of the mind?

mind

having a perceptionhaving sensations

having beliefs

having thoughts

having purposes

having desires

So, the question ‘what is mind?’ is associated with

what is it to perceive?

what is it to have emotions?

etc.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Origins of the discussion

Now, of course, sometimes popular culture blursthings. . . Apparently, mindless zombies can now fall in love!

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Origins of the discussion

Given these associations, what the nature of mind is hasimportant consequences for epistemology, metaphysics, ethics,religion, science, etc.

? ?

Take a human. What is it? Is it just a body, a mechanism?Is there something else, a different type of ‘substance’?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Origins of the discussion

Given these associations, what the nature of mind is hasimportant consequences for epistemology, metaphysics, ethics,religion, science, etc.

? ?

Take a human. What is it?

Is it just a body, a mechanism?Is there something else, a different type of ‘substance’?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Origins of the discussion

Given these associations, what the nature of mind is hasimportant consequences for epistemology, metaphysics, ethics,religion, science, etc.

?

?

Take a human. What is it? Is it just a body, a mechanism?

Is there something else, a different type of ‘substance’?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Origins of the discussion

Given these associations, what the nature of mind is hasimportant consequences for epistemology, metaphysics, ethics,religion, science, etc.

? ?

Take a human. What is it? Is it just a body, a mechanism?Is there something else, a different type of ‘substance’?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Origins of the discussion

In 1770, an inventor presented the Mechanical Turk to theEmpress of Austria:

The mechanism appeared to be able to play a strong game ofchess against a human opponent.

But it was a hoax.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Origins of the discussion

In 1770, an inventor presented the Mechanical Turk to theEmpress of Austria:

The mechanism appeared to be able to play a strong game ofchess against a human opponent. But it was a hoax.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

From Ryle to Armstrong

There were many accusations, failures, hoaxes, etc., discreditingmore naturalistic accounts of the mind. Those suggested thatsomething more was needed to pull the strings in mind-relatedprocesses.

Ryle’s (1900-1976) analysis came up against that; he tried tonaturalize our understanding of the mind by attacking the ‘ghostin the machine view’, and replace it by a behaviorist account.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

From Ryle to Armstrong

There were many accusations, failures, hoaxes, etc., discreditingmore naturalistic accounts of the mind. Those suggested thatsomething more was needed to pull the strings in mind-relatedprocesses.

Ryle’s (1900-1976) analysis came up against that;

he tried tonaturalize our understanding of the mind by attacking the ‘ghostin the machine view’, and replace it by a behaviorist account.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

From Ryle to Armstrong

There were many accusations, failures, hoaxes, etc., discreditingmore naturalistic accounts of the mind. Those suggested thatsomething more was needed to pull the strings in mind-relatedprocesses.

Ryle’s (1900-1976) analysis came up against that; he tried tonaturalize our understanding of the mind by attacking the ‘ghostin the machine view’, and replace it by a behaviorist account.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

From Ryle to Armstrong

Today, we look at the contribution of the Australian philosopherD.M. Armstrong.

(1926 — still alive)

Armstrong was born a generation afterRyle:

Naturalizing the mind is less of acontroversy by then;

He also agrees with Ryle’s materialistproject, but not with itsimplementation.

We examine the paperThe Nature of Mindfrom his 1981 bookThe Nature of Mind and Other Essays.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

From Ryle to Armstrong

Today, we look at the contribution of the Australian philosopherD.M. Armstrong.

(1926 — still alive)

Armstrong was born a generation afterRyle:

Naturalizing the mind is less of acontroversy by then;

He also agrees with Ryle’s materialistproject, but not with itsimplementation.

We examine the paperThe Nature of Mindfrom his 1981 bookThe Nature of Mind and Other Essays.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

From Ryle to Armstrong

Today, we look at the contribution of the Australian philosopherD.M. Armstrong.

(1926 — still alive)

Armstrong was born a generation afterRyle:

Naturalizing the mind is less of acontroversy by then;

He also agrees with Ryle’s materialistproject, but not with itsimplementation.

We examine the paperThe Nature of Mindfrom his 1981 bookThe Nature of Mind and Other Essays.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

From Ryle to Armstrong

Ryle attacked non-naturalistic accounts by logical analysis:

He sought to diagnose category mistakes that lead tohypostasize oversimplified concepts.

The mind is not a ‘mysterious internal arena’ (e.g.,Descartes’ spiritual substance).

The mind is not something behind the behaviour of the body,it is simply part of the physical behaviour.

Armstrong approaches physicalism from another direction; for him,it is not forced by logical analysis.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

From Ryle to Armstrong

Ryle attacked non-naturalistic accounts by logical analysis:

He sought to diagnose category mistakes that lead tohypostasize oversimplified concepts.

The mind is not a ‘mysterious internal arena’ (e.g.,Descartes’ spiritual substance).

The mind is not something behind the behaviour of the body,it is simply part of the physical behaviour.

Armstrong approaches physicalism from another direction; for him,it is not forced by logical analysis.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

From Ryle to Armstrong

Ryle attacked non-naturalistic accounts by logical analysis:

He sought to diagnose category mistakes that lead tohypostasize oversimplified concepts.

The mind is not a ‘mysterious internal arena’ (e.g.,Descartes’ spiritual substance).

The mind is not something behind the behaviour of the body,it is simply part of the physical behaviour.

Armstrong approaches physicalism from another direction; for him,it is not forced by logical analysis.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

From Ryle to Armstrong

Ryle attacked non-naturalistic accounts by logical analysis:

He sought to diagnose category mistakes that lead tohypostasize oversimplified concepts.

The mind is not a ‘mysterious internal arena’ (e.g.,Descartes’ spiritual substance).

The mind is not something behind the behaviour of the body,it is simply part of the physical behaviour.

Armstrong approaches physicalism from another direction; for him,it is not forced by logical analysis.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s argument for Physicalism/Materialism

Modern sciences contribute new clues on mental processes:

Biology:evolution from simple unicellularorganisms

Molecular biology & genetics:physical & chemical basis of life

Neurophysiology:electro-chemical account ofbrain functions

Endocrinology:hormonal effects on moods andbehaviour

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s argument for Physicalism/Materialism

Modern sciences contribute new clues on mental processes:

Biology:evolution from simple unicellularorganisms

Molecular biology & genetics:physical & chemical basis of life

Neurophysiology:electro-chemical account ofbrain functions

Endocrinology:hormonal effects on moods andbehaviour

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s argument for Physicalism/Materialism

Modern sciences contribute new clues on mental processes:

Biology:evolution from simple unicellularorganisms

Molecular biology & genetics:physical & chemical basis of life

Neurophysiology:electro-chemical account ofbrain functions

Endocrinology:hormonal effects on moods andbehaviour

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s argument for Physicalism/Materialism

Modern sciences contribute new clues on mental processes:

Biology:evolution from simple unicellularorganisms

Molecular biology & genetics:physical & chemical basis of life

Neurophysiology:electro-chemical account ofbrain functions

Endocrinology:hormonal effects on moods andbehaviour

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s argument for Physicalism/Materialism

Modern sciences contribute new clues on mental processes:

Biology:evolution from simple unicellularorganisms

Molecular biology & genetics:physical & chemical basis of life

Neurophysiology:electro-chemical account ofbrain functions

Endocrinology:hormonal effects on moods andbehaviour

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s argument for Physicalism/Materialism

“[. . . ] the moral is clear. We must tryto work out an account of the nature ofmind which is compatible with the viewthat man is nothing but aphysico-chemical mechanism.”

But why scientism? Why concede authority to science about thenature of humans, and the nature of mind in particular?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s argument for Physicalism/Materialism

“[. . . ] the moral is clear. We must tryto work out an account of the nature ofmind which is compatible with the viewthat man is nothing but aphysico-chemical mechanism.”

But why scientism? Why concede authority to science about thenature of humans, and the nature of mind in particular?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s argument for Physicalism/Materialism

Are not science,

philosophy, religion, morality, literature, art, etc,all to be equally considered?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s argument for Physicalism/Materialism

Are not science, philosophy,

religion, morality, literature, art, etc,all to be equally considered?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s argument for Physicalism/Materialism

Are not science, philosophy, religion,

morality, literature, art, etc,all to be equally considered?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s argument for Physicalism/Materialism

Are not science, philosophy, religion, morality,

literature, art, etc,all to be equally considered?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s argument for Physicalism/Materialism

Are not science, philosophy, religion, morality, literature,

art, etc,all to be equally considered?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s argument for Physicalism/Materialism

Are not science, philosophy, religion, morality, literature, art, etc,all to be equally considered?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s argument for Physicalism/Materialism

For Armstrong, all the latter fail to lead to consensus; it’sconstant bickering.

Because science alone can lead toconsensus, it must be preferred:“Science has provided us with amethod of deciding disputedquestions.”

True, it is surely fallible, but there’snothing better.

Q: can it decide the right kind ofquestion for our issue?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s argument for Physicalism/Materialism

For Armstrong, all the latter fail to lead to consensus; it’sconstant bickering.

Because science alone can lead toconsensus, it must be preferred:“Science has provided us with amethod of deciding disputedquestions.”

True, it is surely fallible, but there’snothing better.

Q: can it decide the right kind ofquestion for our issue?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s argument for Physicalism/Materialism

For Armstrong, all the latter fail to lead to consensus; it’sconstant bickering.

Because science alone can lead toconsensus, it must be preferred:“Science has provided us with amethod of deciding disputedquestions.”

True, it is surely fallible, but there’snothing better.

Q: can it decide the right kind ofquestion for our issue?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s argument for Physicalism/Materialism

For Armstrong, all the latter fail to lead to consensus; it’sconstant bickering.

Because science alone can lead toconsensus, it must be preferred:“Science has provided us with amethod of deciding disputedquestions.”

True, it is surely fallible, but there’snothing better.

Q: can it decide the right kind ofquestion for our issue?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

The main problem of behaviorism

Ryle achieved Physicalism through Behaviorism.

Remember:

The mind is not an inward arena, it is an outward act.

This view fits very well with a physicalist conception of humans.

If mental processes are identical to their expressions, then there isno tension with a physicalist approach.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

The main problem of behaviorism

Ryle achieved Physicalism through Behaviorism.

Remember:

The mind is not an inward arena, it is an outward act.

This view fits very well with a physicalist conception of humans.

If mental processes are identical to their expressions, then there isno tension with a physicalist approach.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

The main problem of behaviorism

But there is a big objection againstsimple Behaviourism:

“[. . . ] it is our commonexperience that there can bemental processes going onalthough there is nobehaviour occurring thatcould possibly be treated asexpressions of theseprocesses.

A man can beangry but give no bodilysign; he may think, but sayor do nothing at all.”

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

The main problem of behaviorism

But there is a big objection againstsimple Behaviourism:

“[. . . ] it is our commonexperience that there can bemental processes going onalthough there is nobehaviour occurring thatcould possibly be treated asexpressions of theseprocesses. A man can beangry but give no bodilysign; he may think, but sayor do nothing at all.”

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

The main problem of behaviorism

But there is a big objection againstsimple Behaviourism:

“[. . . ] it is our commonexperience that there can bemental processes going onalthough there is nobehaviour occurring thatcould possibly be treated asexpressions of theseprocesses. A man can beangry but give no bodilysign; he may think, but sayor do nothing at all.”

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Introducing dispositions

To counter this objection, Ryleintroduced the concept of disposition.

Instead of identifying mental processeswith actual behaviour, he identifiesthem with dispositions to behave.

“To possess a dispositional property is not to be in a particularstate, or to undergo a particular change; it is to be bound orliable to be in a particular state, or to undergo a particular change,when particular condition is realised.”

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Introducing dispositions

To counter this objection, Ryleintroduced the concept of disposition.

Instead of identifying mental processeswith actual behaviour, he identifiesthem with dispositions to behave.

“To possess a dispositional property is not to be in a particularstate, or to undergo a particular change; it is to be bound orliable to be in a particular state, or to undergo a particular change,when particular condition is realised.”

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Introducing dispositions

To counter this objection, Ryleintroduced the concept of disposition.

Instead of identifying mental processeswith actual behaviour, he identifiesthem with dispositions to behave.

“To possess a dispositional property is not to be in a particularstate, or to undergo a particular change;

it is to be bound orliable to be in a particular state, or to undergo a particular change,when particular condition is realised.”

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Introducing dispositions

To counter this objection, Ryleintroduced the concept of disposition.

Instead of identifying mental processeswith actual behaviour, he identifiesthem with dispositions to behave.

“To possess a dispositional property is not to be in a particularstate, or to undergo a particular change; it is to be bound orliable to be in a particular state, or to undergo a particular change,when particular condition is realised.”

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Introducing dispositions

Example of a disposition: Brittleness

“Brittleness is a disposition, adisposition possessed by materials likeglass. Brittle materials are thosewhich, when subjected to relativelysmall forces, break or shatter easily.But breaking and shattering easily isnot brittleness, rather it is themanifestation of brittleness.”

Other examples?flammable, poisonous

We are still identifying states with outward acts: there is no‘mysterious internal arena’ unidentified with behaviour.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Introducing dispositions

Example of a disposition: Brittleness

“Brittleness is a disposition, adisposition possessed by materials likeglass. Brittle materials are thosewhich, when subjected to relativelysmall forces, break or shatter easily.But breaking and shattering easily isnot brittleness, rather it is themanifestation of brittleness.”

Other examples?

flammable, poisonous

We are still identifying states with outward acts: there is no‘mysterious internal arena’ unidentified with behaviour.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Introducing dispositions

Example of a disposition: Brittleness

“Brittleness is a disposition, adisposition possessed by materials likeglass. Brittle materials are thosewhich, when subjected to relativelysmall forces, break or shatter easily.But breaking and shattering easily isnot brittleness, rather it is themanifestation of brittleness.”

Other examples?flammable, poisonous

We are still identifying states with outward acts: there is no‘mysterious internal arena’ unidentified with behaviour.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Introducing dispositions

Example of a disposition: Brittleness

“Brittleness is a disposition, adisposition possessed by materials likeglass. Brittle materials are thosewhich, when subjected to relativelysmall forces, break or shatter easily.But breaking and shattering easily isnot brittleness, rather it is themanifestation of brittleness.”

Other examples?flammable, poisonous

We are still identifying states with outward acts: there is no‘mysterious internal arena’ unidentified with behaviour.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Introducing dispositions

The following is key to understanding Armstrong’s argument:

For behaviourists, dispositions are not causes.

To continue with the brittleness example:

“The brittleness is not to be conceived of as a cause forthe breakage, or even, more vaguely, a factor in bringingabout the breaking. Brittleness is just the fact thatthings of that sort break easily.”

Is this satisfactorily facing the challenge?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Introducing dispositions

The following is key to understanding Armstrong’s argument:

For behaviourists, dispositions are not causes.

To continue with the brittleness example:

“The brittleness is not to be conceived of as a cause forthe breakage, or even, more vaguely, a factor in bringingabout the breaking. Brittleness is just the fact thatthings of that sort break easily.”

Is this satisfactorily facing the challenge?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Introducing dispositions

The following is key to understanding Armstrong’s argument:

For behaviourists, dispositions are not causes.

To continue with the brittleness example:

“The brittleness is not to be conceived of as a cause forthe breakage, or even, more vaguely, a factor in bringingabout the breaking. Brittleness is just the fact thatthings of that sort break easily.”

Is this satisfactorily facing the challenge?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Amstrong’s main objection

Armstrong argues that Behaviourists did not do enough to dealwith the objection.

“When I think, but my thoughts do notissue in any action, it seems as obvious asanything is obvious that there is somethingactually going on in me which constitutesmy thought. It is not simply that I wouldspeak or act if some conditions that areunfulfilled were to be fulfilled. Somethingis currently going on, in the strongest andmost literal sense of “going on,” and thissomething is my thought. RyleanBehaviourism denies this, and so it isunsatisfactory as a theory of mind.”

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Amstrong’s main objection

Armstrong argues that Behaviourists did not do enough to dealwith the objection.

“When I think, but my thoughts do notissue in any action, it seems as obvious asanything is obvious that there is somethingactually going on in me which constitutesmy thought.

It is not simply that I wouldspeak or act if some conditions that areunfulfilled were to be fulfilled. Somethingis currently going on, in the strongest andmost literal sense of “going on,” and thissomething is my thought. RyleanBehaviourism denies this, and so it isunsatisfactory as a theory of mind.”

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Amstrong’s main objection

Armstrong argues that Behaviourists did not do enough to dealwith the objection.

“When I think, but my thoughts do notissue in any action, it seems as obvious asanything is obvious that there is somethingactually going on in me which constitutesmy thought. It is not simply that I wouldspeak or act if some conditions that areunfulfilled were to be fulfilled.

Somethingis currently going on, in the strongest andmost literal sense of “going on,” and thissomething is my thought. RyleanBehaviourism denies this, and so it isunsatisfactory as a theory of mind.”

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Amstrong’s main objection

Armstrong argues that Behaviourists did not do enough to dealwith the objection.

“When I think, but my thoughts do notissue in any action, it seems as obvious asanything is obvious that there is somethingactually going on in me which constitutesmy thought. It is not simply that I wouldspeak or act if some conditions that areunfulfilled were to be fulfilled. Somethingis currently going on, in the strongest andmost literal sense of “going on,” and thissomething is my thought.

RyleanBehaviourism denies this, and so it isunsatisfactory as a theory of mind.”

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Amstrong’s main objection

Armstrong argues that Behaviourists did not do enough to dealwith the objection.

“When I think, but my thoughts do notissue in any action, it seems as obvious asanything is obvious that there is somethingactually going on in me which constitutesmy thought. It is not simply that I wouldspeak or act if some conditions that areunfulfilled were to be fulfilled. Somethingis currently going on, in the strongest andmost literal sense of “going on,” and thissomething is my thought. RyleanBehaviourism denies this, and so it isunsatisfactory as a theory of mind.”

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s Amendment

Armstrong grants that Behaviourists are right in thinking that ournotion of a mind and of individual mental states is logically tiedto behaviour.

But the relation is not one of identification. It is one of bringingabout, of causing.

His positive view is as follows:

“Thought is not speech under suitable circumstances,rather it is something within the person which, in suitablecircumstances brings about speech.”

Now, is this a friendly or devastating amendment?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s Amendment

Armstrong grants that Behaviourists are right in thinking that ournotion of a mind and of individual mental states is logically tiedto behaviour.

But the relation is not one of identification. It is one of bringingabout, of causing.

His positive view is as follows:

“Thought is not speech under suitable circumstances,rather it is something within the person which, in suitablecircumstances brings about speech.”

Now, is this a friendly or devastating amendment?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s Amendment

Armstrong grants that Behaviourists are right in thinking that ournotion of a mind and of individual mental states is logically tiedto behaviour.

But the relation is not one of identification. It is one of bringingabout, of causing.

His positive view is as follows:

“Thought is not speech under suitable circumstances,rather it is something within the person which, in suitablecircumstances brings about speech.”

Now, is this a friendly or devastating amendment?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s Amendment

Armstrong grants that Behaviourists are right in thinking that ournotion of a mind and of individual mental states is logically tiedto behaviour.

But the relation is not one of identification. It is one of bringingabout, of causing.

His positive view is as follows:

“Thought is not speech under suitable circumstances,rather it is something within the person which, in suitablecircumstances brings about speech.”

Now, is this a friendly or devastating amendment?

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s Amendment

He thinks that scientists don’t treatdispositions as Ryle does. They don’t restsatisfied with the brute fact that somematerials have a disposition.

For example, they further investigate until they can identifybrittleness with the state of the glass that is responsible forthe disposition of the glass to break.

“We have discovered that the brittleness of glass is in fact acertain sort of pattern in the molecules of the glass.”

Similarly, dispositions are to be identified with mental states.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s Amendment

He thinks that scientists don’t treatdispositions as Ryle does. They don’t restsatisfied with the brute fact that somematerials have a disposition.

For example, they further investigate until they can identifybrittleness with the state of the glass that is responsible forthe disposition of the glass to break.

“We have discovered that the brittleness of glass is in fact acertain sort of pattern in the molecules of the glass.”

Similarly, dispositions are to be identified with mental states.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s Amendment

He thinks that scientists don’t treatdispositions as Ryle does. They don’t restsatisfied with the brute fact that somematerials have a disposition.

For example, they further investigate until they can identifybrittleness with the state of the glass that is responsible forthe disposition of the glass to break.

“We have discovered that the brittleness of glass is in fact acertain sort of pattern in the molecules of the glass.”

Similarly, dispositions are to be identified with mental states.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s Amendment

He thinks that scientists don’t treatdispositions as Ryle does. They don’t restsatisfied with the brute fact that somematerials have a disposition.

For example, they further investigate until they can identifybrittleness with the state of the glass that is responsible forthe disposition of the glass to break.

“We have discovered that the brittleness of glass is in fact acertain sort of pattern in the molecules of the glass.”

Similarly, dispositions are to be identified with mental states.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s Amendment

However, conceptualized in this way,dispositions require talking about aninternal arena of mental processes, andso they can’t save Behaviourism.

Then,

“[. . . ] it becomes a scientific question, and not a question oflogical analysis, what in fact the intrinsic nature of that cause is.The cause might be, as Descartes thought it was, a spiritualsubstance working through the pineal gland to produce thecomplex bodily behaviour which men are capable.”

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s Amendment

However, conceptualized in this way,dispositions require talking about aninternal arena of mental processes, andso they can’t save Behaviourism.

Then,

“[. . . ] it becomes a scientific question, and not a question oflogical analysis, what in fact the intrinsic nature of that cause is.The cause might be, as Descartes thought it was, a spiritualsubstance working through the pineal gland to produce thecomplex bodily behaviour which men are capable.”

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s Amendment

Does it not undermine the hope of reaching a physicalistconception of mind?

This view does not entail physicalism, but nonetheless supports it:

“But in fact the verdict of modern science seems to bethat the sole cause of mind-betokening behaviour in manand the higher animals is the physico-chemical workingsof the central nervous system.”

So, based on science, we should identify mental states withphysical states of the central nervous system, not with some othersubstance.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s Amendment

Does it not undermine the hope of reaching a physicalistconception of mind?

This view does not entail physicalism, but nonetheless supports it:

“But in fact the verdict of modern science seems to bethat the sole cause of mind-betokening behaviour in manand the higher animals is the physico-chemical workingsof the central nervous system.”

So, based on science, we should identify mental states withphysical states of the central nervous system, not with some othersubstance.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s Amendment

Does it not undermine the hope of reaching a physicalistconception of mind?

This view does not entail physicalism, but nonetheless supports it:

“But in fact the verdict of modern science seems to bethat the sole cause of mind-betokening behaviour in manand the higher animals is the physico-chemical workingsof the central nervous system.”

So, based on science, we should identify mental states withphysical states of the central nervous system, not with some othersubstance.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Armstrong’s Amendment

Does it not undermine the hope of reaching a physicalistconception of mind?

This view does not entail physicalism, but nonetheless supports it:

“But in fact the verdict of modern science seems to bethat the sole cause of mind-betokening behaviour in manand the higher animals is the physico-chemical workingsof the central nervous system.”

So, based on science, we should identify mental states withphysical states of the central nervous system, not with some othersubstance.

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Summary

So, let’s summarize:

1 We shouldn’t identify mental states and behaviour.“The mind is, rather, that which stands behind and bringsabout our complex behaviour.”

2 Dispositions, properly understood, are really state that bringabout (or ‘cause’) behaviour under specified circumstances.

3 This view is compatible and indeed supports (but not in apurely logical way) physicalism.

4 The debate can be understood dialectically:Thesis (non-naturalistic account), antithesis (Ryle’sBehaviourism), synthesis (Armstrong position).

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Summary

So, let’s summarize:

1 We shouldn’t identify mental states and behaviour.“The mind is, rather, that which stands behind and bringsabout our complex behaviour.”

2 Dispositions, properly understood, are really state that bringabout (or ‘cause’) behaviour under specified circumstances.

3 This view is compatible and indeed supports (but not in apurely logical way) physicalism.

4 The debate can be understood dialectically:Thesis (non-naturalistic account), antithesis (Ryle’sBehaviourism), synthesis (Armstrong position).

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Summary

So, let’s summarize:

1 We shouldn’t identify mental states and behaviour.“The mind is, rather, that which stands behind and bringsabout our complex behaviour.”

2 Dispositions, properly understood, are really state that bringabout (or ‘cause’) behaviour under specified circumstances.

3 This view is compatible and indeed supports (but not in apurely logical way) physicalism.

4 The debate can be understood dialectically:Thesis (non-naturalistic account), antithesis (Ryle’sBehaviourism), synthesis (Armstrong position).

Introductory Remarks Physicalism Behaviorism & Dispositions Toward a New Conception

Questions for discussion

More discussion:

A key point here is: what sort of thing can be shown bylogical analysis, and what can be learned by scientific inquiry?

What about consciousness? How does Armstrong approachthis problem?

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