McGinn - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 25
About This Presentation
Title:

McGinn

Description:

McGinn s Mysterianism This Week s Visits Tuesday, April 6: Robinson, Theisen, Tierney, Weiland And: Those who missed earlier visits. You know who you are. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:82
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 26
Provided by: University407
Category:
Tags: mcginn | mysteries

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: McGinn


1
McGinns Mysterianism
2
This Weeks Visits
  • Tuesday, April 6 Robinson, Theisen, Tierney,
    Weiland
  • And Those who missed earlier visits. You know
    who you are.

3
Colin McGinn (b. 1950-)
  • McGinn (U. of Miami) is a full-time surfer who
    has written influential books about
    consciousness, ethics, sports, film, evil, and
    Shakespeare.
  • Some of his books includeThe Mysterious Flame
    Conscious Minds In A Material World The Making
    of a Philosopher My Journey Through
    Twentieth-Century Philosophy Mindfucking The
    Critique of Mental Manipulation

4
New Mysterianism
  • McGinn is the leading thinker of a group of
    philosophers known as the New Mysterians (named
    after a 60s band).
  • They take up the mantle of the Old Mysterians
    like John Locke who maintained that we cannot
    understand the mind-brain connection.

5
Example of a mystery
6
Mysteries vs. Miracles
  • Clarification McGinn maintains that
    consciousness is mysterious, but denies that it
    is miraculous.
  • Mystery a phenomenon that lies beyond the
    limits of our understanding.
  • Miracle an action of a deity that violates a
    law of nature.

7
1st Question What is mysterious?
  • Question What is it exactly about consciousness
    that McGinn regards as mysterious?

8
Answer
  • What is mysterious is the link or connection
    between (a) what goes on in the brain (b) what
    goes on in phenomenal consciousness.
  • He does not doubt that brain events are de facto
    correlated with conscious events he even
    concedes that brain events cause conscious events
    (although it is not clear he is entitled to the
    latter claim).
  • But creatures with our powers of understanding do
    not and cannot understand why particular types of
    brain processes are necessarily connected with
    particular types of conscious experience.

9
2nd Question Why is it mysterious?
  • Question Why does McGinn think that this
    connection is necessarily mysterious to us?
  • What is his argument for this claim?

10
Preliminary 1 Cognitive closure
  • Def. cognitive closure A type of mind M is
    cognitively closed with respect to a property P
    (or theory T) if and only if the concept-forming
    procedures at Ms disposal cannot extend to a
    grasp of P (of an understanding of T). (p. 350).

11
Preliminary 2 Natural Property P
  • McGinn assumes that the psychophysical link will
    consist in some natural property p. (Natural
    here just means roughly instantiated in the
    physical world.
  • It is safe to say that McGinn does not feel a
    need to argue for naturalism There just has to
    be some explanation for how brains subserve
    minds (353).
  • We will come back to this point later if he is
    right that naturalists cannot hope to find P,
    the question becomes whether we should prefer (a)
    his nonconstructive naturalism, or (b)
    constructive theism.

12
Where is P?
13
What is the structure of his argument?
  • McGinn maintains that human beings cannot
    reasonably hope to discover P.
  • Question What is the logical structure of the
    main argument that he presents for this claim?

14
Dilemma
  • P1 If we are capable of discovering P, then this
    must come either through (a) introspection, (b)
    perception, or (c) inference from perception.
  • P2 (a) introspection.
  • P3 (b) perception.
  • P4 (c) inference from perception.
  • C We are not capable of discovering P.

15
(a) introspection
  • Question How does/could he support this claim?

16
(a) introspection
  • Introspection does not present conscious states
    as depending upon the brain in some intelligible
    way. We cannot therefore introspect P (354).
  • Worry It is hard to see how he could prove that
    this is the case. He can only prove that he
    cannot find P through introspection.

17
(b) perception
  • Question Why does he think that we cannot
    discover P through empirical investigation of the
    brain?

18
(b) perception
  • The crucial point is that we only directly
    perceive spatial properties of objects.
  • You can stare into a living conscious brain,
    your own or someone elses, and see there a wide
    variety of instantiated properties its shape,
    colour, texture, etc. but you will not thereby
    see what the subject is experiencing, the
    conscious state itself I take it this is
    obvious (357).
  • So MRIs let us perceive the neural correlates of
    consciousness but not phenomenal consciousness
    itself.

19
(c) inference from perception
  • McGinn maintains that we are not Humean minds,
    in the sense that perceptual closure does not
    (for us) entail cognitive closure.
  • Thus, even if we do not directly perceive P, we
    might be able to conceive of P through
    inferences to the best explanation of what we
    do perceive. This is how science usually
    proceeds
  • Question How does he rule out this possibility
    (pp. 358-9)? Why cannot we theoretically posit P
    in order to explain the workings of the brain?

20
(c) inference from perception
  • First Homogeneity constraint. If our data,
    arrived at by perception of the brain, do not
    include anything that brings in conscious states,
    then the theoretical properties we need to
    explain these data will not include conscious
    states either Everything physical has a purely
    physical explanation (358).
  • Question Does this seem plausible to you? Can
    you think of a counter-example to this principle?

21
(c) inference from perception
  • Second Appeal to analogical reasoning does not
    help. This is fine for physics we can posit
    atoms they are like physical objects, just
    much smaller.
  • But this does not work for consciousness the
    inferred property P would be similar in kind to
    brain properties but then it wont be able to
    explain consciousness.

22
Conclusion?
23
Conclusion Metaphysics or Epistemology?
  • McGinn argues that the mystery is merely a
    reflection of our ignorance. The M-B connection
    is not ultimately mysterious. It is just
    mysterious to us, given our limited faculties.
  • This is good enough for him. It teaches us that
    there is no philosophical problem about
    consciousness we can rest secure in the
    knowledge that some (unknoweable) property of the
    brain makes everything fall into place (362).
  • McGinn seems to think that he is doing us a
    favor. We need no longer waste our time trying
    to solve the M-B problem. And we need not
    superstitiously invoke miracles to address it.

24
New Mysterianism Thanks!
25
Evaluation?
  • Question What are the strongest objections that
    can be raised against his position and argument?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com