by Thomas Pyne
Suppose that the phenomena historically associated with demonic possession can be explained as psychotic symptoms. That would not tempt us in the slightest to adopt reductionist theoretical identities like:
Suppose that the phenomena historically associated with demonic possession can be explained as psychotic symptoms. That would not tempt us in the slightest to adopt reductionist theoretical identities like:
- Belial = Psychotic Condition X
- Asmodeus = Psychotic Condition Y
Instead we would just say, “There
are no demons.” And eliminate them from
our ontology.
What makes a sort of entity A a candidate for an
eliminativist program rather than reduction via theoretical identification? Two conditions: (i) A does no work in a literal and
complete account of Everything That Is So; (ii) A has dubious
credentials. That is, we have reason to
suppose that our acceptance of A was based on some cognitive error,
or confusion. An eliminativist program
then must account for the error by which we came, mistakenly, to think that
there were A’s.
Contemporary Eliminative Physicalism has been conscientious
in its attempt to meet both conditions.
First condition: it claims that attributing mental states is not needed
in a literal and complete account of the world. Rather, the place of those
attributions will be taken, as Paul Churchland puts it, by the employment of the
conceptual scheme of a matured neuroscience. It’s not that, say, ‘believing’ will be revealed as a brain process;
it’s that there is no such thing as
believing. With the science-based
conceptual scheme we will be able to talk about what is really going on in the
brain instead. Adoption of the new
scheme in place of the old will constitute a “quantum leap in self-apprehension.”
(It will accomplish that, of course, only if our ordinary mental attributions really
don’t do any work.)
Second condition: our
traditional attribution of mental states is consequent upon a conceptual scheme
that embodies a mistaken and inadequate theory.
This conceptual scheme, “Folk Psychology,” is the same kind of error or
confusion as invoking demons to explain the voices schizophrenics hear.
The two conditions on an eliminativist program are not
independent. If it turns out that
accepting a sort of entity A is not, after all, a cognitive error or
confusion (which is required for meeting the second condition), this weakens
our grounds for thinking that A will not figure in a literal and
complete account of Everything That Is So.
This
trope of characterizing our mental concepts as ‘Folk Psychology’should be
subjected to sterner questioning than it usually is. In particular we should question the
assumption that our ordinary mental concepts form a theory. Just
on the face of it, this is an implausible piece of historical revisionism, and
I have thought so from the very first time I encountered the phrase.
In
any language with which I was familiar the common verbs for cognitive activity
are of the same antiquity, and are as much semantic ‘roots,’ as the verbs for
other common activities. Liddell &
Scott’s Greek-English Lexicon thoughtfully prints semantic roots in caps.
GEN (‘become’: the root of ordinary
Greek epistemic terms, eg. gnosis) BOL
(‘desire’ or ‘intend’), PEITHO (‘overcome,’ ‘persuade,’ or in the middle voice
‘believe’) are basic to the language as EDO (‘eat’), PNEO (‘breathe’), BDEO
(‘fart’), and BINEO (‘mate’). In Old
English ‘think,’ ‘ween,’ ‘deem’ are “four-letter” words: as ancient as ‘walk,’ ‘sleep,’ and
‘shit.’
The
best abductive explanation of this fact is that mental terms, like the other
terms, designate common ordinary human functions and actions. There is no particular distinction made
between ‘physical’ actions and functions and ‘mental’ ones. Eating, sleeping, farting, thinking, believing,
and desiring are all just Stuff People Do.
To
describe someone as ‘believing that it will rain,” or “wanting to lie down” is
not to offer some sophisticated – though mistaken – explanation of what they’re doing; it’s simply to describe it. What is
a piece of philosophical sophistication is distinguishing between the ‘mental’
and ‘physical’ in a way that makes such attributions seem conceptually
troublesome. But this philosophical
sophistication doesn’t license our reading that distinction back into our ordinary
conceptual scheme.
To
use an analogy, ‘Zeus’s Spear’ is an explanatory
concept (in ‘Folk Meteorology’) of a more basic phenomenon, lightning. ‘Lightning,’ however, is not a term of Folk
Meteorology: it does not convey an explanation of anything. It names the phenomenon to be explained. Likewise, there is no more basic phenomenon
that ‘believe’ serves to explain: it is the phenomenon. ‘Believe’ is like ‘lightning,’ not like
‘Zeus’s Spear.’
Eliminative
physicalism regarding the mental became a popular strategy in the 80’s and 90’s
again when it grew increasingly clear that reductive physicalism was never
going to work. But candidates for
eliminativist strategies are entities with dubious credentials, our belief in
which is based on confusions. Thinking,
desiring, and believing hardly come with dubious credentials. They are common human functions, among the
most obvious and humdrum features of our being in the world.
They
are, when you stop to think about it, the least likely candidates imaginable
for an eliminativist program. After all,
there are no philosophers trying to eliminate ‘shit.’
That's because it makes an indispensable contribution to a literal and complete account of Everything That Is So.
Thomas F. Pyne
Professor
Department of Philosophy
Sacramento State
That's because it makes an indispensable contribution to a literal and complete account of Everything That Is So.
Thomas F. Pyne
Professor
Department of Philosophy
Sacramento State