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In her work Language, Thought and Other Biological Categories Cambridge, Mass., 1984, and in subsequent articles, Ruth Millikan has presented arguably the most detailed application of ev

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called the ‘school of experience and association’ He

denied that there is knowledge independent of experience

and held that attitudes and beliefs are the products of

psy-chological laws of association His view of human beings

is *naturalistic and his ethics is utilitarian But he

redesigned the liberal edifice built on these foundations to

the romantic patterns of the nineteenth century For these

he was himself one of the great spokesmen He learned

much of the historical sociology which was so important

to his liberalism from Frenchmen; but it was to German

romanticism, via his Coleridgean friends, that he owes his

deepest ethical theme—that of human nature as the seat

of individuality and autonomy, capable of being brought

to fruition through the culture of the whole man

The controversy over Mill’s achievement has always

centred on whether the synthesis he sought, of

enlighten-ment and romantic-idealist themes, is a possible one Kant

had argued that the naturalism of the *Enlightenment

subverted reason, and idealist philosophers of the

nine-teenth century followed him in that Kant and Mill do in

fact agree on a vital aspect of this question They agree

that if the mind is only a part of nature, no knowledge of

the natural world can be *a priori Either all knowledge is

a posteriori, grounded in experience, or there is no

know-ledge Any grounds for asserting a proposition that has

real content must be empirical grounds However, much

more important is the difference between them: whereas

Kant thought knowledge could not be grounded on such a

basis, and thus rejected naturalism, Mill thought it could

This radically empiricist doctrine is the thesis of the System

of Logic.

There Mill draws a distinction between ‘verbal’ and

‘real’ propositions, and between ‘merely apparent’ and

‘real’ inferences The distinction corresponds, as Mill

him-self notes, to that which Kant makes between analytic and

synthetic judgements But Mill applies it with greater

strictness than anyone had done before, insisting with

greater resolution that merely apparent inferences have

no genuine cognitive content He points out that pure

mathematics, and logic itself, contain real propositions

and inferences with genuine cognitive content This clear

assertion is central to the System of Logic, and the basis of its

continuing importance in the empiricist tradition For if

Mill is also right in holding that naturalism entails that no

real proposition is a priori, he has shown the implications

of naturalism to be radical indeed Not only mathematics

but logic itself will be empirical

His strategy is a pincer movement One pincer is an

indirect argument If logic did not contain real inferences,

all deductive reasoning would be a petitio principii, a

beg-ging of the question—it could produce no new

know-ledge Yet clearly it does produce new knowknow-ledge So logic

must contain real inferences The other pincer is a direct

semantic analysis of basic logical laws It shows them to be

real and not merely verbal The same strategy is applied to

mathematics If it was merely verbal, mathematical

rea-soning would be a petitio principii But a detailed semantic

analysis shows that it does contain real propositions

Why do we think these real propositions in logic and mathematics to be a priori? Because we find their neg-ations inconceivable, or derive them, by principles whose unsoundness we find inconceivable, from premisses whose negation we find inconceivable Mill thought he could explain these facts about unthinkability, or imagin-ative unrepresentability, in associationist terms His explanations are none too convincing, but his philosophi-cal point still stands: the step from our inability to repre-sent to ourselves the negation of a proposition to acceptance of its truth calls for justification Moreover, the

justification itself must be a priori if it is to show that the

proposition is known a priori (Thus Mill is prepared, for example, to concede the reliability of geometrical intu-ition: but he stresses that its reliability is an empirical fact, itself known inductively.)

All reasoning is empirical What then is the basis of rea-soning? Epistemologically, historically, and

psycho-logically, Mill holds, it is enumerative induction, simple

generalization from experience We spontaneously agree

in reasoning that way, and in holding that way of reason-ing to be sound The proposition ‘Enumerative induction

is a valid mode of reasoning’ is not a verbal proposition But nor is it grounded in an a priori intuition All that Mill will say for it is that people in general, and the reader in particular, in fact agree on reflection in accepting it It is on that basis alone that he rests its claim

He does not take seriously Hume’s sceptical problem

of *induction; his concern in the System of Logic is rather

to find ways of improving the reliability of inductive reasoning:

if induction by simple enumeration were an invalid process, no process grounded on it would be valid; just as no reliance could be placed on telescopes, if we could not trust our eyes But though a valid process, it is a fallible one, and fallible in very different degrees: if therefore we can substitute for the more fallible forms

of the process, an operation grounded on the same process in a less fallible form, we shall have effected a very material improve-ment And this is what scientific induction does

So Mill’s question is not a sceptical but an internal one—why is it that some inductions are more trustworthy than others? He answers by means of a natural history of induction, which traces how enumerative induction is internally vindicated by its actual success in establishing regularities, and how it eventually gives rise to more searching methods of investigation

The origins are ‘spontaneous’ and ‘unscientific’ induc-tions about particular unconnected natural phenomena They accumulate, interweave, and are not disconfirmed

by further experience As they accumulate and inter-weave, they justify the second-order inductive conclusion

that all phenomena are subject to uniformity, and, more

specifically, that all have discoverable sufficient condi-tions In this less vague form, the principle of general uni-formity becomes, given Mill’s analysis of causation, the law of universal causation This conclusion in turn pro-vides (Mill believes) the grounding assumption for a new

style of reasoning about nature—eliminative induction.

600 Mill, John Stuart

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Here the assumption that a type of phenomenon has

uniform causes, together with a (revisable) assumption

about what its possible causes are, initiates a comparative

inquiry in which the actual cause is identified by

elimin-ation Mill formulates the logic of this eliminative

reason-ing in his ‘methods of empirical inquiry’ The improved

scientific induction which results spills back on to the

principle of universal causation on which it rests, and

raises its certainty to a new level That in turn raises our

confidence in the totality of particular enumerative

induc-tions from which the principle is derived This analysis of

the ‘inductive process’ is one of Mill’s most elegant

achievements

Mill and Hume then are both naturalistic radicals, but

in quite different ways—Hume by virtue of his scepticism,

Mill by virtue of his empiricist analysis of deduction The

only cognitive dispositions which Mill recognizes as

primi-tively legitimate are the disposition to rely on memory

and the habit of enumerative induction The whole of

sci-ence, he thinks, is built from the materials of experience

and memory by disciplined employment of this habit

This is Mill’s inductivism—the view that enumerative

induction is the only ultimate method of inference which

puts us in possession of new truths Is he right in thinking

it to be so? In his own time the question produced an

important, if confused, controversy between him and

William Whewell Whewell argued that fundamental to

scientific inquiry was the hypothetical method, in which

one argues to the truth of a hypothesis from the fact that it

would explain observed phenomena Mill, on the other

hand, could not accept that the mere fact that a hypothesis

accounted for the data in itself provided a reason for

think-ing it true The point he appealed to is a powerful one: it is

always possible that a body of data may be explained

equally well by more than one hypothesis

What he does not see, and this is one of the points of

weakness in his philosophy, is how much must be torn

from the fabric of our belief if inductivism is applied

strictly Thus, for example, while his case for empiricism

about logic and mathematics is very strong, it is his

methodology of science which then forces him to hold

that we know basic logical and mathematical principles

only by an enumerative induction That is desperately

implausible; accepting the hypothetical method would be

one, though only one, possible remedy

Inductivism also plays a key role in Mill’s metaphysics

He sets this out in his Examination of Sir William Hamilton’s

Philosophy (1865)—a detailed criticism of the Scottish

philosopher who had attempted to bring together the

views of Reid and Kant Here Mill endorses a doctrine

which was then accepted, as he says, on all sides (though it

would now be treated with greater mistrust) The

doc-trine is that our knowledge and conception of objects

external to consciousness consists entirely in the

con-scious states they excite in us, or that we can imagine them

exciting in us

This leaves open the question whether objects exist

independently of consciousness It may be held that there

are such objects, although we can only know them by hypothesis from their effects on us Mill rejects this view—

as, given his inductivism, he must Instead he argues that external objects amount to nothing more than ‘perman-ent possibilities of sensation’ The possibilities are ‘per-manent’ in the sense that they obtain whether or not realized; they would occur if an antecedent condition obtained (As well as ‘permanent’ Mill uses other terms, such as ‘certified’ or ‘guaranteed’.)

Our knowledge of mind, like our knowledge of matter, Mill thinks to be ‘entirely relative’ But he baulks at resolv-ing it into a series of feelresolv-ings and possibilities of feelresolv-ing For

‘the thread of consciousness’ contains memories and expectations as well as sensations To remember or expect

a feeling is not simply to believe that it has existed or will

exist; it is to believe that I have experienced or will

experi-ence that feeling Thus if the mind is to be a series of feel-ings, we would, he thinks, be forced to conclude that it is a series that can be aware of itself as a series This drives him

to recognize in mind, or self, a reality greater than the exist-ence as a permanent possibility which is the only reality he concedes to matter He fails to note that the doctrine that mind resolves into a series of feelings need not literally

identify selves with series: it paraphrases talk of selves in

terms of talk of series

Discounting this uncertainty about what to say of the self, all that ultimately exists in Mill’s view is experience in

a temporal order But he claims this to be consistent with

*common-sense realism, and he continues to see minds as proper parts of a natural order The difficulties of this begin to emerge when we ask whether the experiences referred to in Mill’s metaphysics are the very same as those referred to by common sense—and explained by physical antecedents The same difficulties emerge for later *phe-nomenalists, but Mill never addresses them

To the succeeding generation of philosophers, who took Kant’s philosophy seriously, Mill’s naturalism seemed thoroughly incoherent He fails to see the need for

a synthetic a priori to render any knowledge possible, even though he gives an account of real propositions and inferences which agrees in essentials with Kant On top of that, in accepting phenomenalism he accepts a doctrine which must lead to a transcendental view of conscious-ness, yet he remains determinedly naturalistic in his view

of the mind Perhaps present-day naturalism is finding ways of avoiding this second impasse, by being more rig-orously naturalistic about experience than Mill was But it has yet to cope clearly with the first

In ethics and politics Mill’s premisses remain those of enlightenment *humanism Value resides in the well-being achieved within individual lives; the interests of all make an equal claim on the consideration of all Happi-ness is most effectively attained when society leaves people free to pursue their own ends subject to rules estab-lished for the general good A science of man will ground rational policies for social improvement

His reason for thinking that *happiness is the only ultimate human end is just like his reason for thinking

Mill, John Stuart 601

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enumerative induction is the only ultimate principle of

reasoning He appeals to reflective agreement, in this case

of desires rather than reasoning dispositions: ‘the sole

evi-dence it is possible to produce that anything is desirable, is

that people do actually desire it If the end which the

utili-tarian doctrine proposes to itself were not, in theory and in

practice, acknowledged to be an end, nothing could ever

convince any person that it was so.’

But do we not, in theory and in practice, desire things

under ends other than the end of happiness, for example

under the idea of duty? Mill’s response to this question has

strength and subtlety He acknowledges that we can will

against inclination: ‘instead of willing the thing because

we desire it, we often desire it only because we will it’

There are, he agrees, conscientious actions, flowing not

from any unmotivated desire but solely from acceptance

of duty But his point is that when we unmotivatedly

desire a thing we desire it under the idea of it as pleasant

He further distinguishes between desiring a thing as ‘part’

of our happiness and desiring it as a means to our

happi-ness Virtuous ends can be a part of happiness: consider,

for example, the difference between a spontaneously

gen-erous man and a conscientious giver The first wants to

give because he takes pleasure in giving The second gives

from a ‘confirmed will to do right’ The benefit of another

is for the first, but not the second, a ‘part’ of his own

happiness

The *virtues can become a part of our happiness, and

for Mill they ideally should be so That ideal state is not an

unrealistic one, for the virtues have a natural basis and a

moral education can build on it by association More

gen-erally, people can come to a deeper understanding of

hap-piness through education and experience Mill holds that

some forms of happiness are inherently preferred as

finer by those able to experience them fully—but these

valuations are still in his view made from within the

perspective of happiness, not from outside it

So Mill deepened the Benthamite understanding of

happiness; however, he never adequately examined the

principle of utility itself It was a philosopher of the

gener-ation after Mill’s, Henry Sidgwick, who probed its

ground-ings most deeply But when we turn to Mill’s conception

of the relationship between the utility principle and the

texture of norms by which day-to-day social life proceeds,

we find him at his most impressive His ability to combine

abstract moral theory with the human understanding of a

great political and social thinker here comes into its own

Benthamite radicalism lacks historical and sociological

sense The philosophes of the eighteenth century,

‘attempting to new-model society without the binding

forces which hold society together, met with such success

as might have been expected’

The utilitarian, he says, need not and cannot require

that ‘the test of conduct should also be the exclusive

motive of it’ This historical and concrete aspect of Mill’s

*utilitarianism is the key to his view of the institutions of

justice and liberty; though his analysis of rights follows

Bentham A person has a right to a thing, he holds, if there

is an obligation on society to protect him in his possession

of that thing But the obligation itself must be grounded in general utility

The rights of *justice reflect a class of exceptionally stringent obligations on society They are obligations to provide to each person ‘the essentials of human well-being’ The claim of justice is the ‘claim we have on our fellow-creatures to join in making safe for us the very groundwork of our existence’ Because justice-rights pro-tect those utilities which touch that groundwork they take priority over the direct pursuit of general utility as well as over the private pursuit of personal ends

With *liberty we find again that Mill’s liberalism is grounded on a utilitarian base He appeals to ‘utility in the largest sense, grounded on the permanent interests of man as a progressive being’ In that respect, his liberalism stands opposed to the classical natural-rights liberalism of Locke The famous principle which Mill enunciates in his

On Liberty is intended to safeguard the individual’s

free-dom to pursue his goals in his private free-domain: ‘the only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilised community, against his will, is

to prevent harm to others His own good, either physical

or moral, is not a sufficient warrant.’

Mill magnificently defends this principle of liberty on two grounds: it enables individuals to realize their individ-ual potential in their own way, and, by liberating talents, creativity, and dynamism, it sets up the essential pre-condition for moral and intellectual progress Yet the limitations of his Benthamite inheritance, despite the major enlargements he made to it, residually constrain him His defence of the principle would have been still stronger if he had weakened (or liberalized) its founda-tion—by acknowledging the irreducible plurality of human ends and substituting for aggregate utility the generic concept of general good j.m.s

Fred R Berger, Happiness, Justice and Freedom: The Moral and Polit-ical Philosophy of John Stuart Mill (London, 1984).

Wendy Donner, The Liberal Self: John Stuart Mill’s Moral and Polit-ical Philosophy (Ithaca, NY, 1991).

Alan Ryan, J S Mill (London, 1974).

Geoffrey Scarre, Logic and Reality in the Philosophy of John Stuart Mill (Dordrecht, 1989).

John Skorupski, John Stuart Mill (London, 1989).

—— (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Mill (Cambridge, 1998).

C L Ten, Mill on Liberty (Oxford, 1980).

Millikan, Ruth (1933– ) In her work Language, Thought and Other Biological Categories (Cambridge, Mass., 1984),

and in subsequent articles, Ruth Millikan has presented arguably the most detailed application of evolutionary theory to certain philosophical problems She develops a notion of a thing’s function in terms of things of that type,

in the past, having being selected to play a particular causal role, so capturing the intuition that a thing can have a function that, in fact, it does not now carry out She applies this notion to thought and language, claiming that, in each case, representation is the biological function of the

602 Mill, John Stuart

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medium of thought and of language This impels her to

espouse a type of realism, and deny what she calls

‘mean-ing rationalism’, the view that language-users and

thinkers have privileged access to the meanings they have

conveyed by their language use, or which constitute their

*evolution

Mill’s methods: see method of agreement; method of

dif-ference; method, joint; method of residues; method of

concomitant variations

mimesis.Imitation, representation Plato’s well-known

attack on the poets begins with the assertion that poetry is

a kind of ‘mimesis’ The word is evidently used in two

senses (1) Playing a dramatic role or reciting a speech

from Homer is imitating (or impersonating) someone.

Such mimesis can harm the actor if the character imitated

is bad (2) Narrative *poetry represents people’s behaviour.

Mimesis in this sense is also exemplified by reflections in

mirrors and representational painting To produce such

representations, Plato says, one does not need knowledge

of the thing represented, but only of how it appears

His complaint is that poets achieve with their skills a

dangerous reputation as authorities on matters, such as

good conduct, of which they are ignorant ‘Children and

fools’ are similarly taken in by trompe-l’œil paintings.

r.j.h

Plato, Republicx Various translations available, e.g that by G M

A Grube and C D C Reeve (Indianapolis, 1992)

mind.You have a mind if you think, perceive, or feel Your

mind is like your life or your weight, an abstract version of

an unproblematic property When minds are thought of

as objects in their own right, with parts as if they were

spa-tially extended and with continuity through time as if they

were physical objects, then they become much more

thought-provoking They become like souls or selves We

don’t have to take minds as objects They can be features

of other objects, such as persons (persons typically have

heights and weights and minds) or features of person’s

lives Still, we can study minds inasmuch as we can study

thinking, perceiving, and feeling This is psychology

The concepts of thinking, perceiving, and feeling are

among a large family of concepts, including, for example,

remembering, loving, and wishing, which every person

picks up in childhood when they acquire their culture’s

conception of mind Developmental psychologists have

differing opinions about whether this conception is a fairly

arbitrary theory which could vary in essential respects

from one culture to another, or whether there is a core

way of thinking about mind to which humans inevitably

gravitate Such a core conception would correspond to

what functionalist thinkers in the philosophy of mind,

such as Putnam and Fodor, have postulated as the set of

essential connections between beliefs, desires, memories,

and other states, which characterize mind: a mind is

anything, be it human, animal, or extraterrestrial, which has states connected in the way the core conception describes

Even if there were a core concept of mind, it could be wrong That is, the underlying neurological facts about why we act in the ways that we describe as thinking, per-ceiving, and feeling may be so different from our charac-terizations of them in everyday or ‘folk psychological’ terms that to think of people as being or having minds is positively misleading This is the position of eliminative materialism, associated with Feyerabend, Rorty, and Patricia and Paul Churchland It is not at all obviously right There is a lot of philosophical and scientific work to

do before we can see where the answer lies

If minds are real features of people then there may be aspects of these features which are not easily described in terms of everyday concepts such as thinking, perceiving, and feeling For example, there might be subconscious processes which are best described in the language of psy-choanalysis Psychology, psychoanalysis, and other discip-lines might tell us things about what we call mind which are unavailable to common-sense or to introspection Certainly one conclusion that seems to be emerging from cognitive psychology, for example in the work of Nisbett and Ross, is that the explanations people give of the rea-sons for their actions are much more often wrong than they imagine Whatever our limitations in knowing what

we are thinking or feeling, our limitations in knowing why

we think or feel seem to be very much greater In one way this might not be surprising, for the reasons why we think

or feel surely include many physical causes of which a per-son is completely unaware And in fact one of the sources

of the impression of free will may be the blindness of con-sciousness to the causes of thought and feeling a.m

*cognitive architecture; consciousness, its irreducibil-ity; mind, syntax, and semantics; psyche; dualism; mind–body problem; eliminative materialism; free-dom; functionalism; self

Paul Churchland, Matter and Consciousness (Cambridge, Mass.,

1988)

D C Dennett and R Hofstadter, The Mind’s I (New York, 1981;

Harmondsworth, 1982)

Henry Wellman, The Child’s Theory of Mind (Cambridge, Mass.,

1990)

mind, history of the philosophy of Philosophizing about the mind is as old as philosophy itself, whereas phil-osophy of mind, proper—a distinctive subfield of philoso-phy—is of relatively recent advent Both Plato and Aristotle present mature theories of the nature, structure, and types of psyche, theories that clearly depended on prior theorizing And every great philosopher of the mod-ern period, most notably Descartes, but also Hobbes, Locke, Berkeley, Hume, and Kant, propose theories of mind In general, this theorizing takes place within meta-physics, epistemology, or moral theory and not in the service of developing a theory of mind for its own sake Plato’s tripartite division of psyche into rational,

mind, history of the philosophy of 603

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appetitive, and temperamental parts occurs in the Republic

as part of the rationale for structuring political life in a

cer-tain way Aristotle’s distinction among the types of psyche

in nature are part of his biological metaphysic; and his

vision of the distinctive features of the human psyche as

involving the capacity for reason and virtue serves his

eth-ical theory *Mind–body dualism emerges as a

fundamen-tal truth within Descartes’s epistemological project

Hobbes’s mechanistic psychology in the first part of

Leviathan prepares the way for the famous claims about

human nature in chapter 13 The laws of association of the

Empiricists were attempts to answer distinctively

philo-sophical questions about the nature and limits of human

knowledge And, of course, Kant’s Copernican turn in

philosophy, the proposal that mind lays down certain a

priori conditions for experience, was meant to answer the

deep scepticism about causation, *self, and transcendental

matters such as the existence of God generated by Hume’s

epistemology

The philosophy of mind now exists as a distinctive

sub-field of philosophy There are journals devoted to work in

it; job applicants claim to specialize in it; and so on But its

emergence cannot be precisely dated It is best to think of

the philosophy of mind as emerging during the late

nine-teenth century and first half of the twentieth century

Pro-fessional recognition of it as a distinct and important

subfield comes only after 1950, despite the fact that one

finds ‘philosophical anthropology’ and ‘philosophy of

mind’ on medieval lists under the entry ‘Metaphysics’, and

works like that of the Scottish philosopher Thomas

Brown’s Lectures on the Philosophy of the Mind appear as

early as 1820

The following developments were seminal in the early

stages First, the founding of scientific psychology as an

offshoot from philosophy is, in the lore, dated to Wilhelm

Wundt’s founding of a psychological laboratory in Leipzig

in 1879 Here master introspectors were trained and

mem-ory and reaction-time experiments were set up and carried

out All the founding documents of scientific psychology

attest to acute self-concern on the part of the founders in

making clear and defensible philosophical assumptions

and in developing empirically secure methods that would

be immune from the scorn the new science brought

against a priori theorizing about mind So psychology was

born in the late 1800s as a philosophically self-conscious

discipline

Second, in 1874 Franz Brentano published his

Psych-ology from an Empirical Standpoint It is here that Brentano

resurrected Aristotle’s and Aquinas’s notion of

*intention-ality — from the Latin, intendo, meaning ‘to aim at or point

toward’ The idea was that paradigm-case mental states,

beliefs, desires, hopes, expectations, and the like, have

intentional objects Beliefs, desires, wishes, expectations,

and so on, are of or about something: I believe that

[Thatcher was Prime Minister]; I wish that [Reagan had

not been President] What a belief or wish is about—

Thatcher or Reagan—is its ‘object’, whereas the

propos-itional thought expressed—that Thatcher was Prime

Minister or that Reagan had not been elected—is its

‘content’

Brentano’s thesis is that *intentionality is the inelimin-able mark of the mental Psychology will need to be intentional, that is, the explanation of human thought and action will require us to make an inventory of all the types

of mental state (beliefs, desires, and so on) that human minds are capable of going into, and it will also need to focus on the intentional objects and contents of these states (it remains a possibility that not all mental states are inten-tional; perhaps pains and moods have no objects or propos-itional contents and thus are not of or about anything at all) To explain why an individual reaches for that cool drink, we will need to posit not only belief and desire states, but belief and desire states with a particular intentional object, a cool drink, and content, that this is a cool drink

A lively contemporary debate concerns the issue of whether only conscious mental states can be intentional, and whether other states involved in belief or desire for-mation are purely computational, not ‘mental’ at all in any interesting sense It is noteworthy that Sigmund Freud took three and a half years of elective courses with Franz Brentano while he was in medical school Indeed, one fruitful way of thinking of psychoanalysis is as involving

an extension of Brentano’s basic insight Not only are con-scious intentional states causally efficacious, but so too are unconscious intentional states So just as my desire for a cool drink and my belief that this is a water-fountain in front of me explains my taking a drink, so too my uncon-scious desire to kill the boss explains my hostile verbal edge towards him

Third, in 1890 William James published his

monumen-tal Principles of Psychology Not only was this great work a

compendium of all known psychological knowledge, culled mostly from the new scientific psychologists but also from more traditional philosophical sources, it was also a troubled testimony to James’s own recognition that

a scientific theory of mind was in deep tension with trad-itional philosophical ways of thinking about mind This comes out clearly in the book when James discusses the deterministic assumption made by psychologists and the assumptions about human freedom made in ethics James indicates that for purposes of living, but not for doing psychology, the assumption of *free will is the stronger This same ambivalence carried over to James’s ambi-valence about what field he himself worked in Over a brief period in the late 1880s and 1990s, James switched his Harvard appointment several times between medicine, psychology, and philosophy, before finally settling into philosophy for the remainder of his career

James’s Psychology treats all the great metaphysical and

epistemological problems in the philosophy of mind In addition to the problem of *free will and free action, he discusses the status of introspection, the problem of other minds, the nature of the emotions, the mind–body prob-lem And he takes not only Cartesian dualism, but Male-branche’s occasionalism, Leibniz’s parallelism, and Huxley’s epiphenomenalism, as live options

604 mind, history of the philosophy of

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Wundt, Brentano, and James together represent some

of the most important foundational work in the science of

the mind But it is, at the same time, important work in the

philosophy of mind, work filled with philosophical

assumptions about the nature of mind, analyses of

com-peting models, and recommendations about the proper

methods for studying mind and conceiving its nature In

their hands, mind becomes an important topic in its own

right, worthy of attention in a science of its own, the

fledg-ling psychology, and in need of a general philosophical

analysis of such questions as: What is this thing called

‘mind’? What is its place in nature? How is mind to be

known?

The next phase in the development of the philosophy of

mind, a phase which leads to its finding a distinctive niche,

and to its professional recognition as a subfield, occurs

between 1900 and 1950 Roughly, what happens is this:

scientific psychology emerges not as a unified theory but

as a bundle of theories with radically different

methodo-logical approaches There were introspectionists, and

anti-introspectionists, behaviourists, and functionalists,

depth psychologists, and their opponents In 1933 Edna

Heidbreder wrote her important Seven Psychologies, still an

excellent survey of the theory diffusion affecting

psych-ology at its birth This theoretical diffusion forced debate

about the proper methods and assumptions of

psych-ology, both among leading psychologists like Wundt,

Titch-ener, John B Watson (whose manifesto ‘Psychology as a

Behaviorist Views It’ was published in 1913), and

eventu-ally B F Skinner—who left a poet’s life in Greenwich

Vil-lage for the halls of psychology (in what is today William

James Hall, the philosophy department at Harvard being

housed in Emerson Hall) after reading a popular magazine

article by Bertrand Russell about *Logical Positivism—

and also among philosophers as diverse as James and

Rus-sell, and John Dewey and Rudolf Carnap Indeed, so close

were the relations between *psychology and philosophy

even after the new science had declared its independence

that three philosophers, William James, Mary Calkins,

James’s student and a professor of philosophy and

psychology at Wellesley College, and John Dewey, held

the presidencies of both the American Philosophical

Associ-ation and the American Psychological AssociAssoci-ation during

the early years of psychology’s development And it was

only in 1974 that Mind dropped the fifth and sixth words

from its subtitle, ‘A Quarterly Review of Psychology and

Philosophy’

Dewey and Carnap can be thought of as representatives

of what were to become the two sides of the philosophy of

mind, one side concerned primarily with the metaphysics

of mind, the other with the methodological foundations

of psychology and the epistemic status of first- and

third-person psychological reports In a series of papers

pub-lished at the turn of the century, Dewey began to defend a

picture of mind that was naturalistic without being

mech-anistic He rejected the picture of mental action as

con-sisting of simple reflexes or complexes of reflexes, as well

as the Cartesian picture of the mind as an incorporeal

sub-stance Dewey proposed instead a picture of mind inspired

by Darwin and James The human mind is the result of selective forces building the most powerful and adaptive organism ever known If Dewey was concerned primarily with developing a naturalistic metaphysic of mind con-sonant with evolutionary theory, Carnap was concerned primarily with the epistemological status of first- and third-person psychological reports In part this concern was motivated by the appeal the positivists made to obser-vation reports as the rock-bottom foundation for all sci-ence Statements such as ‘Water is H2O’ or ‘The atomic number of gold is 79’ depend on grounding theory in observation, often observations mediated by instrumen-tation Perceptual reports ground all science—even chem-istry and physics How trustworthy are such reports? The positivists were quick to defend intersubjective observa-tion reports, reports made by several independent observers, as reliable enough for the physical sciences But what about the status of intrasubjective, first-person psy-chological sentences, such as ‘I’m in a good mood’ or ‘I’m visualizing my mother’s face’? What about the whole idea that expertise in introspection could be developed? How could such expertise be measured or verified? In his 1931 paper ‘Psychology in a Physical Language’, Carnap asserted that first-person psychological reports were

‘intertranslatable with some sentence of physical lan-guage, namely, with a sentence about the physical state of the person in question’ Such reports refer (inadvertently,

we might say) ‘to physical processes in the body of the per-son in question On any other interpretation’ such reports

‘become untestable in principle, and thus meaningless’ The two strands, concern with the metaphysics of mind and with the logical status of sentences about mind, come

together in Gilbert Ryle’s The Concept of Mind (1949) If

there is a founding document in the contemporary philoso-phy of mind proper, Ryle’s book is it First, there is a spirited attack on the Cartesian picture of mind as a

*‘ghost in the machine’ Second, there is a relentless attack

on the doctrine of *privileged access, the view that the mind is transparent to its owner, and that we each have unmediated and incorrigible access to our own mental states Third, there is the proposal that *‘mind’, the Cartesian conception of mind, at any rate, is simply a mystifying way

of speaking about certain behavioural dispositions of the organism According to Ryle’s logical behaviourism, just

as ‘solubility’ is nothing mysterious, referring simply to the disposition of a substance to dissolve in liquid, likewise talk of mental states, talk of ‘belief ’ and ‘desire’, is, in so far

as it is meaningful, talk of dispositions of the organism to

behave in certain ways It is ironic that the locus classicus of

contemporary philosophy of mind argued in a sense that there really was no such thing as ‘mind’ as traditionally understood

The work after Ryle constitutes the recent history of the philosophy of mind, a period characterized by two somewhat distinct sorts of work First, there was work of analysis—work devoted to the analysis of *sensation and

*perception (Chisholm, Armstrong, Sellars), intentionality,

mind, history of the philosophy of 605

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free action, the *emotions (Kenny), the debate about

*rea-sons and causes, the possibility of *private language, and

of knowledge of one’s own and *other minds

Ryle while claiming to be no behaviourist emphasized

the centrality, indeed the indispensability, of behaviour in

the ascription of mental terms Wittgenstein did much the

same thing in his Philosophical Investigations (Eng tr 1953).

Wittgenstein’s specific argument against the

develop-ment of a private language was developed, clarified, and

defended by Norman Malcolm in his review of the

Philo-sophical Investigations in the PhiloPhilo-sophical Review in 1954.

Malcolm pointed out the relevance of the private

lan-guage argument for the problem of other minds in his

‘Knowledge of Other Minds’ (1958) Other important

work on other minds includes A J Ayer’s, The Concept of a

Person (1956) and The Problem of Knowledge (1963).

Important works on free action and the question

whether reasons can be causes include: G E M

Anscombe’s Intention (2nd edn 1963), Hart and Honoré’s

Causation in the Law (1959), A I Melden’s Free Action

(1961), J L Austin’s ‘Ifs and Cans’ (1961), and Donald

Davidson’s ‘Actions, Reasons, and Causes’ (1963)

It was P F Strawson’s Individuals (1959), an essay in

‘descriptive metaphysics’, that made the radical but

extremely helpful proposal that the traditional

mind–body problem be reconceived along the following

lines: the concept of a person is primitive and both mental

and physical predicates are ascribable to persons, that is, to

one and the same thing

In addition to the latter work of philosophical analysis

of mental concepts and attempts to state more clearly and

helpfully traditional philosophical problems, there was a

spate of work specifically devoted to developing

distinct-ive materialistic alternatdistinct-ives to Cartesian *dualism and

to each other, and by debates among the proponents

of these different theories about the nature of

psycho-logical explanation The three main materialistic theories

are *identity theory, *eliminative materialism, and

*functionalism

Type-identity theory (reductive materialism) J J C Smart,

U T Place, and David Armstrong proposed this simple

and compelling solution to the mind–body problem: each

type of mental state is identical to some type of

yet-to-be-discovered neural state Just as water is H2O and common

salt is NaCl and the temperature of a gas is mean

molecu-lar kinetic energy, mental terms like ‘believing’, ‘desiring’,

and ‘loving’ will be shown to be synonymous with terms

that refer to types of neural events, so that some day

we shall be able to say ‘Love is such-and-such activity in

sector 1704’

Eliminativism Paul Feyerabend and Richard Rorty

issued this objection to identity theory: identity theory

assumes that our ordinary mentalistic ways of

taxonomiz-ing psychological events, in terms of beliefs, desires, and

the like, are not only good ways to taxonomize things for

ordinary purposes, but in fact map perfectly on to

(yet-to-be-discovered) underlying neural kinds But why think

that the case of belief and its kin is more like the case of

water, where the mapping to H2O in fact works out, than like the case of our ordinary concept of fish, or, even worse, like the concepts of witch or phlogiston? In the case

of fish, whales and dolphins were picked out by the con-cept for millennia, but are now known not to be fish at all, but mammals The concepts witch and phlogiston both had great importance in their day, but both are now known to refer to nothing at all Type identity theory assumes precise mappings from the mental to the neural which warrant a reduction or replacement of the mental-istic vocabulary with the neural vocabulary, and at the same time legitimizes the mentalistic vocabulary by showing that it always (inadvertently) referred to the underlying types of neural events But Feyerabend and Rorty contend that mental talk was not intended to refer

to neural events, nor did it inadvertently succeed in so doing *‘Folk psychology’, with its strong Cartesian roots, was intended as, and succeeded in being, a theory that rivals scientific ways of conceiving of mind The elimin-ativist position has been developed further and cham-pioned in recent years by Patricia S Churchland and Paul M Churchland and is a challenge to ‘mental realism’, our ordinary way(s) of conceiving of the mental

Functionalism challenges both type-identity theory and

eliminativism An important but iconoclastic paper in this genre is Donald Davidson’s ‘Mental Events’ (1970), in which he proposed the view he called *anomalous monism According to this doctrine mental events are physical events but they are not reducible by definition or natural law, nor are they in any other straightforward way intertranslatable with physical terms Against type-identity theory, the functionalist thinks it implausible that every person’s belief that ‘snow is white’ is or must be real-ized in the same type of neural state Functionalists think that all beliefs in the whiteness of snow are physical but allow for multiple physical *realizations of the belief Just

as ‘capital’ comes in many different forms, any form of cash or property will do, so too my belief that snow is white, and yours, and a Martian’s, could be realized in dif-ferent ways The idea of multiple realizations has made functionalism a favourite doctrine among believers in strong artificial intelligence, the view that there is no rea-son in principle why computers shouldn’t have bona fide mental states—indeed even be conscious Different real-ization would be consistent with physicalism (token-physicalism), but would dash hopes for smooth type–type reductions since there would be no bridge law translating predicates such as ‘believes snow is white’, ‘is in love’,

‘wants a drink’ into single predicates in physical language (to be fair to identity theory, it can accommodate this idea

up to a point by allowing for species-specific type-identities,

so that cat-thoughts that ‘there is water’ and human ones are realized in different ways) Against the eliminativist, the functionalist holds out hope for folk psychology or, better, sees it as a starting-place, subject to refinement and rigour, for the development of an autonomous sci-ence of the mind We start with a conception of mind as roughed out by folk psychology but with a commitment

606 mind, history of the philosophy of

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to physicalism We then do experiments, draw inferences

about how different cognitive subsystems work to

pro-duce the phenomenon being studied, e.g language

com-prehension, memory, etc., and in so doing arrive at an

abstract conception of how the mind works—without

ever mentioning how these workings are realized

physically

As identity theory, functionalism, and eliminativism

bumped up against each other throughout the 1960s,

1970s, and 1980s, they also began to bump up against the

emerging amalgam of disciplines known today as

*cogni-tive science Cogni*cogni-tive science was rooted in work of

logi-cians, psychologists, computer scientists, and

neuro-scientists, great thinkers such as Alan Turing,

Ken-neth Craik, Claude Shannon, Norbert Wiener, Warren

McCulloch, Walter Pitts, Karl Lashley, and John von

Neu-mann (Howard Gardner dates the birth of cognitive

sci-ence from the Hixon Confersci-ence at Caltech in 1948), who

were thrilled by the prospect of blending insights from

their different disciplines in order to understand the mind

The interdisciplinary attitude and the

wait-and-see-we-are-early-in-the-game attitude that pervade cognitive

sci-ence made philosophers of mind aware that we could not

know a priori how the relations among folk psychology,

more refined cognitive models, and neuroscience would

work out It could be that identity theory is true in certain

domains and in species-specific ways, e.g chimpanzee

vision might map neatly in chimps’ brains and human

vision in human brains And it might be that neuroscience

will spell doom for certain ways of thinking about mind,

while certain abstract functional modes of explanation

retain their value The view favoured by most

contempor-ary philosophers of mind is the co-evolutioncontempor-ary idea P S

Churchland, cooling recently towards eliminativism,

expresses the basic idea in terms of constraining and

devel-oping each type of explanation by what is known at other

levels of explanation, especially at adjacent levels

The co-evolutionary strategy has important

implica-tions for the very idea of philosophy of mind as

tradition-ally conceived, for it suggests that there is no subfield of

philosophy proper that can deepen our understanding of

mind Mind will be understood, if it is understood, by our

best science Philosophers who study work in the relevant

sciences will be welcomed in the interdisciplinary quest to

understand mind Quine proposed that philosophy was

continuous with science; philosophy of mind as practised

today has taken Quine to heart At the same time it has

become somewhat less clear what if anything the

distinc-tively philosophical, as opposed to the scientific, issues are

In what sense, one might ask, is the question of the nature

of mind a philosophical question rather than a

founda-tional question within the science of the mind? o.f

*consciousness; consciousness, its irreducibility;

men-tal events; menmen-tal states; identity theory; eliminativism;

functionalism

Patricia Smith Churchland, Neurophilosophy (Cambridge, Mass.,

1986)

Owen Flanagan, The Science of the Mind, 2nd edn (Cambridge,

Mass., 1991)

Jerry Fodor, ‘Special Sciences’, in Representations: Philosophical Essays on the Foundations of Cognitive Science (Cambridge, Mass.,

1981)

Howard Gardner, The Mind’s New Science: A History of the Cognitive Revolution (New York, 1985).

John Heil and Alfred Mele (eds.), Mental Causation (Oxford, 1993).

A J P Kenny, Ancient Philosophy (Oxford, 2004), ch.7.

—— Medieval Philosophy (Oxford, 2005), ch.7.

David Rosenthal (ed.), Materialism and the Mind–Body Problem

(Indianapolis, 1987)

Gilbert Ryle, The Concept of Mind (first pub 1949; Chicago, 1984).

mind, problems of the philosophy of Philosophical problems about the mind are among the enduring prob-lems of philosophy; arguably, they are among the most deeply puzzling and challenging issues that philosophy has had to face

1 Characterizing the mental We come face to face with

one of these issues when we try to give an initial delin-eation of the sphere of the mental Mental events or states seem to fall under two broad kinds One is comprised of those involving sensory qualities, or *‘qualia’, such as pains and itches, seeing colours and hearing sounds, experi-encing pangs of hunger, and having after-images, and the like As it is often put, there is ‘something it is like’ to be

in one of these states—it is like something to see a yellow field of sunflowers, and that is different from what it is like

to see the blue sky above it These may be called ‘qualita-tive mental states’ or, more simply, ‘experiences’ The sec-ond class of mental states, called ‘propositional attitudes’

or ‘intentional states’, includes states that have content,

such as believing that Mt Everest is the tallest mountain, being pleased that the home team has won the football match, and remembering one’s telephone number (Some mental states, such as emotions and perceptions, appear

to possess both content and sensory aspects; e.g feeling annoyed that your flight has been cancelled, noticing that the traffic-lights have just turned red.) But it has not been easy to answer the following question: What common property, or properties, do phenomena of these two kinds share in virtue of which they are all mental? What do itches and beliefs have in common that makes both mental?

One might say, following Descartes, that your know-ledge that you are in one of these states is in some sense

‘immediate’ or ‘direct’ and carries a special sort of first-person authority However, people often have beliefs and desires of which they are not aware, much less ‘immedi-ately aware’; and research in cognitive psychology has shown that much of our perceptual information-processing is not at all accessible to the subject Moreover,

it has been argued that there can be sensations, such as pains, of which the subjects, in the heat of combat or intense absorption in another activity, are unaware Can

we say then, following *Brentano, that the *mentality of mental phenomena consists in their *‘intentionality’— their ‘aboutness’ or ‘being directed upon’ an object? Thus,

mind, problems of the philosophy of 607

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your belief that Mt Everest is the tallest mountain is about

Mt Everest, and is directed upon it Or, as we may say,

your thought has Mt Everest as its ‘intentional object’

However, it is difficult, if not incoherent, to conceive of a

pain, or a tickle, to be ‘about’, or ‘directed upon’, anything

There are perhaps other possible approaches to this issue,

but the problem of formulating an adequate ‘criterion of

the mental’ has resisted solution It may be that all mental

states are characterized by a certain kind of subjectivity, a

‘point of view’ or ‘perspectivalness’; however, precisely

what this subjectivity amounts to is still an open question

2 The mind–body problem In a broad sense, the problem

of accounting for the place of mind in a world that is

fun-damentally physical is coextensive with philosophy of

mind In a narrower sense, the problem is that of

explain-ing the relationship between mentality and the physical

nature of our being Substance dualism, which posits

immaterial souls or minds as bearers of mental states, has

largely disappeared from contemporary discussion, and

the focus of discussion in the mind–body debate has

shifted to the status of mental states, processes, and

prop-erties vis-à-vis physical states, processes, and propprop-erties.

We know, from familiar daily experience as well as

scien-tific and clinical observations, that mental phenomena are

correlated in lawlike ways with various specific physical

processes going on in the body, and neurophysiological

research has amassed huge amounts of information on the

details of how specific mental capacities, functions, and

processes depend on the structure and functioning of our

central nervous system But is it possible that the mental

depends on and yet remains distinct from the physical? If

so, what is the nature of this dependency? Or is the mental

in fact a subspecies of the physical?

The mind–body identity theory, also known as

central-state materialism, brain-central-state theory, and type

*physical-ism, holds that mental properties, or kinds, are reducible

to, or can be reductively identified with, physical

(pre-sumably, neurobiological) properties and kinds Just as

sci-entific research has shown that light is a form of

electromagnetic radiation and that genes are DNA

mol-ecules, argues the reductionist, neurophysiological

research will show (perhaps, it has already shown) that

pain is just the excitation of a certain group of neurons in

the hypothalamus, that consciousness is 40 Herz

synchron-ized neuronal oscillation, and, in general, that mental

states are just neural processes in the brain Physical

reductionism of this form, however, has not been popular,

since the 1970s *Functionalism, which has been

influen-tial since the late 1960s, maintains that mental kinds are

not physical kinds, but rather ‘functional kinds’, defined

by their causal role in relation to sensory inputs,

behav-iour outputs, and other mental states On this approach,

pain, for example, would be an internal state of an

organ-ism that is typically caused by tissue damage and that in

turn causes such effects as winces, groans, and a sense of

distress However, the ontological status of functional

properties, in particular their status as causal powers, has

remained elusive; and serious doubts have been raised as

to whether the sensory or qualitative character of mental-ity can be captured on the functionalist approach More-over, it is not clear exactly how functionalism differs from the identity theory, and it remains an open question whether functionalism is a form of reductionism Others maintain that the mind–body relation is adequately char-acterized as one of *‘supervenience’—that is, in the claim that there could not be two entities, or worlds, that are exactly alike in all physical respects but differ in some men-tal respect But it is arguable that supervenience in this sense lacks sufficient content to qualify as a full theory of the mind–body relation; this is perhaps evident in the apparent fact that the reductionist, the functionalist, and even the epiphenomenalist are all committed to mind– body supervenience There is also the *eliminativist alter-native: mentality, like the posits of discarded scientific the-ories such as phlogiston and magnetic effluvia, will be expunged from our ontology as the neuroscientific under-standing of human nature makes its inexorable advance

3 How can my mind move my limbs? Impingements on our

sensory surfaces cause sensations and perceptions, which

in turn cause us to form beliefs about our surroundings Our desires and wants, in concert with the beliefs we hold about the world, cause us to act, by moving our limbs or making our vocal cords vibrate in appropriate ways Men-tal causation—that is, causality involving menMen-tal events as causes or effects—seems an undeniable fact of daily experi-ence Evidently, moreover, it is essential to our concep-tion of ourselves as cognizers and agents: the acquisiconcep-tion

of knowledge about our surroundings requires our per-ceptions and beliefs to be appropriately caused by ambient events, and genuine agency requires that the agent’s intentions and decisions have the power to cause his limbs

to move and thereby alter the arrangements of objects around him

A fundamental difficulty with Descartes’s interactionist dualism of mental and material substances was its per-ceived inability to explain how mental causation was pos-sible How could some wholly immaterial substance, entirely outside physical space, affect the motion of even a single molecule? By what mechanism is this miraculous transmission of causal influence accomplished? More-over, there is reason to believe that the physical domain is

causally closed; that is, tracing back a causal chain starting

with a physical event should not take us out of the physical domain To deny this would be tantamount to denying the completability of a physical theory of the physical world; it would be to assert that only by importing non-physical causal agents or forces could physics hope to be a complete explanatory theory of physical phenomena For these reasons, some have found *epiphenomenalism attractive: mental phenomena are caused by physical (pre-sumably, neural) phenomena, but they are themselves mere ‘epiphenomena’ with no causal powers of their own They are like shadows or afterglows cast by neural processes

608 mind, problems of the philosophy of

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donald davidson addressed in seminal articles a variety of

the most prominent questions in late twentieth-century

phil-osophy of mind and language; their prominence is largely

attributable to his treatment of them

hilary putnam has deployed mathematical and scientific expertise to establish a clearer view of the status of scientific and philosophical knowledge and truth

john searle first came to prominence in the 1960s with his

work on the philosophy of language; now he is a leading

crit-ic of cognitive science, specifically of the aim of giving a

mate-rialist account of the mind

thomas nagel has not shrunk from the big questions: What does it all mean? What is it like to be a bat? (The second is about the nature of consciousness.)

Photographs by Steve Pyke

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