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Metaphysics of Mind :: Other Psychophysical Relations :: Psychophysical Relations, Misc

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Ajdukiewicz, Kazimierz (1995). The psychophysical nature of humans. Axiomathes 6 (1).   (Google | More links | Edit)
Alfred Hoernle, R. F. (1917). The mental and the physical as a problem for philosophy. Philosophical Review 26 (3):297-314.   (Google | Edit)
Baker, Lynne Rudder (2000). Reply to Frank Jackson. Philosophical Explorations 3:196-8.   (Google | Edit)
Abstract: Commonsense psychological explanations are an integral part of a comprehensive commonsense background that includes almost everything that we deal with everyday— from traffic jams to paychecks to cozy dinners for two. It is the comprehensive commonsense background that I think is not wholesale refutable by science. A good deal of the comprehensive commonsense background itself depends on there being beliefs, desires, intentions and other propositional attitudes. If there never have been propositional attitudes, then there never have been statues or schools or terrorists or Nobel prizes. Since I think it unreasonable to suppose that science will reveal that there never has been a statue, or a school or a terrorist or a Nobel prize, I also think it unreasonable to suppose that science will reveal that nobody has ever had a belief, desire, intention or other propositional attitude.1
Baker, Lynne Rudder (2000). Reply to Jackson, II. Philosophical Explorations 3 (2):196-198.   (Cited by 1 | Google | More links | Edit)
Barnette, R. L. (1978). Grounding the mental. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 39 (September):92-105.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Bolender, John (2003). A farewell to isms. In Sven Walter & Heinz-Dieter Heckmann (eds.), Physicalism and Mental Causation. Imprint Academic.   (Google | Edit)
Candlish, Stewart (1971). Physiological discoveries: Criteria or symptoms. Analysis 31 (April):162-165.   (Google | Edit)
Cohen, Morris R. (1917). The distinction between the mental and the physical. Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 14 (10):261-267.   (Google | More links | Edit)
de Laguna, Grace A. (1918). The empirical correlation of mental and bodily phenomena. Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 15 (20):533-541.   (Cited by 2 | Google | More links | Edit)
Findlay, J. N. (1950). Linguistic approach to psychophysics. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 50:43-64.   (Google | Edit)
Foster, John A. (1968). Psychophysical causal relations. American Philosophical Quarterly 5 (January):64-70.   (Cited by 5 | Google | Edit)
Francescotti, Robert M. (2002). Whether mentality is higher-level. Philosophical Inquiry 24 (3-4):65-76.   (Google | Edit)
Harrison, Stephen (1989). A new visualization of the mind-brain relationship. In The Case for Dualism. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia.   (Google | Edit)
Heath Bawden, H. (1902). The functional view of the relation between the psychical and the physical. Philosophical Review 11 (5):474-484.   (Google | Edit)
Heath Bawden, H. (1904). The physical and the psychical. Philosophical Review 13 (5):541-546.   (Google | Edit)
Hedman, Carl G. (1970). On correlating brain states with psychological states. Australasian Journal of Philosophy 48 (August):247-51.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Hollingworth, H. L. (1916). The psychophysical continuum. Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 13 (7):182-190.   (Cited by 1 | Google | More links | Edit)
Honderich, Ted (1991). Better the union theory. Analysis 51 (June):166-173.   (Google | Edit)
Hopkins, James (1978). Mental states, natural kinds and psychophysical laws. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 221:221-236.   (Cited by 2 | Google | Edit)
Hornsby, Jennifer (2000). Reply to Jackson, I. Philosophical Explorations 3 (2):193-195.   (Cited by 1 | Google | More links | Edit)
Irani, K. D. (1980). Conceptual changes in problem of mind-body relation. In Body & Mind: Past, Present And Future. New York: Academic Press.   (Google | Edit)
Kim, Jaegwon (2002). Horgan's naturalistic metaphysics of mind. Grazer Philosophische Studien 63 (1):27-52.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: Terry Horgan has made impressive and highly important contributions to numerous fields of philosophy – metaphysics, philosophy of mind and psychology, philosophy of language, philosophy of science, and value theory, to mention the most prominent ones. What gives Horgan's work a powerful and clarifying unity is his deep and unflagging commitment to philosophical naturalism. In fact, Horgan himself has often invoked naturalism to motivate his positions and arguments on a number of philosophical issues. In this talk, I will discuss some questions concerning Horgan's naturalism and his philosophy of mind.Among them are such questions as these: What exactly is the naturalism that drives Horgan's philosophical thinking? Is it a reasonable and plausible form of naturalism? Exactly how does his naturalism lead to the conclusions and arguments he defends? Should "proper" naturalists follow Horgan's lead? I will discuss these questions in relation to Horgan's work on mind-body supervenience, the autonomy of psychological explanation, reductionism, mental causation, and related issues
Kim, Jaegwon (2003). Supervenience, emergence, realization, reduction. In The Oxford Handbook of Metaphysics. Oxford University Press.   (Cited by 4 | Google | Edit)
Laurie, S. S. (1894). Reflexions suggested by psychophysical materialism. Mind 3 (9):56-76.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Marcus, Eric (2006). Events, sortals, and the mind-body problem. Synthese 150 (1):99-129.   (Cited by 1 | Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: In recent decades, a view of identity I call Sortalism has gained popularity. According to this view, if a is identical to b, then there is some sortal S such that a is the same S as b. Sortalism has typically been discussed with respect to the identity of objects. I argue that the motivations for Sortalism about object-identity apply equally well to event-identity. But Sortalism about event-identity poses a serious threat to the view that mental events are token identical to physical events: A particular mental event m is identical with a particular physical event p only if there is a sortal S such that m and p are both Ss. If there is no such sortal, the doctrine of token-identity is not true. I argue here that we have no good reason for thinking that there is any such sortal
Marras, Ausonio (2001). On Putnam's critique of metaphysical realism: Mind-body identity and supervenience. Synthese 126 (3):407-426.   (Cited by 1 | Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract:   As part of his ongoing critique of metaphysical realism, Hilary Putnam has recently argued that current materialist theories of mind that locate mental phenomena in the brain can make no sense of the proposed identifications of mental states with physical (or physical cum computational) states, or of the supervenience of mental properties with physical properties. The aim of this paper is to undermine Putnam's objections and reassert the intelligibility – and perhaps the plausibility – of some form of mind-body identity and supervenience
McGinn, Colin (1978). Mental states, natural kinds and psychophysical laws. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 52:195-220.   (Cited by 8 | Annotation | Google | Edit)
McGinn, M. (2000). Real things and the mind-body problem. Philosophical Psychology 100 (3):303-17.   (Cited by 1 | Google | More links | Edit)
Miles, T. R. (1964). The mental--physical dichotomy. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 64:71-84.   (Cited by 2 | Google | Edit)
Murphy, Claudia M. (1984). Anti-reductionism and the mind-body problem. Philosophy Research Archives 10:441-454.   (Google | Edit)
Place, Ullin T. (2000). The two factor theory of the mind-brain relation. Brain and Mind 1 (1):29-43.   (Cited by 1 | Google | Edit)
Quine, Willard V. (1978). Reply to Lycan and Pappas's Quine's materialism. Philosophia 7 (July):637-638.   (Google | Edit)
Raab, Francis V. (1965). Of minds and molecules. Philosophy of Science 32 (January):57-72.   (Cited by 1 | Google | More links | Edit)
Randall Jr, J. H. (1946). A note on mr Sheldon's mind. Journal of Philosophy 43 (April):209-213.   (Google | Edit)
Rieser, Max (1946). A methodological investigation into the relation between mind and body. Journal of Philosophy 43 (September):551-557.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Ritchie, A. D. (1931). The relations of mental and physical processes. Mind 40 (158):171-187.   (Cited by 1 | Google | More links | Edit)
Rockwell, W. Teed (2005). Neither Brain nor Ghost: A Nondualist Alternative to the Mind-Brain Identity Theory. Cambridge MA: MIT Press.   (Cited by 5 | Google | More links | Edit)
Schectman, M. (1997). The brain/body problem. Philosophical Psychology 10 (2):149-64.   (Google | Edit)
Searle, John R. (online). Biological naturalism.   (Cited by 7 | Google | Edit)
Skillen, A. (1984). Mind and matter: A problem which refuses dissolution. Mind 93 (October):514-26.   (Cited by 5 | Annotation | Google | More links | Edit)
Skorpen, Erling (1973). Pin-pricks to the body and pains to the mind: A natural history and philosophy. Philosophy Forum 14 (September):53-79.   (Google | Edit)
Smith, Ralph L. (1999). A testable mind-brain theory. Journal of Mind and Behavior 20 (4):421-436.   (Cited by 1 | Google | Edit)
Snyder, Douglas M. (1988). On complementarity and causal isomorphism. Journal of Mind and Behavior 9:1-4.   (Google | Edit)
Sprigge, Timothy L. S. (1981). Honderich, Davidson, and the question of mental holism. Inquiry 24 (October):323-342.   (Google | Edit)
Stemmer, Nathan (2001). The mind-body problem and Quine's repudiation theory. Behavior And Philosophy 29:187-202.   (Cited by 10 | Google | More links | Edit)
Stoeger, William R. (1999). The mind-brain problem, the laws of nature, and constitutive relationships. In Neuroscience and the Person: Scientific Perspectives on Divine Action. Notre Dame: University Notre Dame Press.   (Cited by 2 | Google | Edit)
Taylor, A. E. (1904). Mind and body in recent psychology. Mind 13 (52):476-508.   (Cited by 1 | Google | More links | Edit)
van Gelder, Tim (1998). Monism, dualism, pluralism. Mind and Language 13 (1):76-97.   (Cited by 3 | Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: 1. Consider the basic outlines of the mind-body debate as it is found in contemporary Anglo-American analytic philosophy. The central question is “whether mental phenomena are physical phenomena, and if not, how they relate to physical phenomena.”1 Over the centuries, a wide range of possible solutions to this problem have emerged. These are the various “isms” familiar to any student of the debate: Cartesian dualism, idealism, epiphenomenalism, central state materialism, non- reductive physicalism, anomalous monism, and so forth. Each purports to specify, among other things, the metaphysical relationship between the mental and the physical. They do so by specifying whether, or in what way, mental entities are identical to, reducible to, realized by, supervenient upon, or in causal interaction with physical entities. Thus, a convenient way to survey the range of positions is to enter them in a table (see Table 1). Rows correspond to the major kinds of metaphysical relation which might obtain between mental and physical entities. Each columns corresponds to one of the generic positions available in the debate. The particular theories defended by individual philosophers are usually just specific versions of generic positions. Thus Malebranche’s occasionalism is a version of causal dualism, distinguished by a peculiar account of the way in which causal interaction between mental and physical is actually effected. The central philosophical challenge is to determine which of these positions correctly describes the mental/physical relationship. Positions are evaluated for internal consistency, their fit with “intuitions,” their compatibility with scientific developments, and so forth. The mind-body debate, in this simple form, is set out in any number of..
Watson, Richard A. (1994). Having ideas. American Philosophical Quarterly 31 (3):185-198.   (Google | Edit)
Wick, Warner A. (1953). Minds, artificial languages, and philosophy. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 14 (December):228-238.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Williams, Forrest (1988). Psychophysical correspondence: Sense and nonsense. In Herbert R. Otto & James A. Tuedio (eds.), Perspectives On Mind. Dordrecht: Kluwer.   (Google | Edit)
Wilson, Edgar (1981). Psychophysical relations. Inquiry 24 (October):305-322.   (Google | Edit)
Wilson, Margaret D. (1985). What is this thing called 'pain'? The philosophy of science behind the contemporary debate. Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 66 (January):227-67.   (Cited by 11 | Annotation | Google | Edit)
Winch, W. H. (1910). 2.0.CO;2-4'>Physiological' and 'psychological. Mind 19 (74):200-217.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Wisdom, John O. (1952). A new model for the mind-body relationship. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 2 (February):295-301.   (Cited by 2 | Google | More links | Edit)
Zucker, Francis J. (online). Three counter strategies to reductionism in science.   (Google | Edit)

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