Re-Thinking the World with Neutral Monism:Removing the Boundaries Between Mind, Matter, and Spacetime

Herein we are not interested in merely using dynamical systems theory, graph theory, information theory, etc., to model the relationship between brain dynamics and networks, and various states and degrees of conscious processes. We are interested in the question of how phenomenal conscious experienc...

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Main Authors: Michael Silberstein, William Stuckey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-05-01
Series:Entropy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/22/5/551
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spelling doaj-b0ad968d015f49cf9bf30117a048e8842020-11-25T02:33:18ZengMDPI AGEntropy1099-43002020-05-012255155110.3390/e22050551Re-Thinking the World with Neutral Monism:Removing the Boundaries Between Mind, Matter, and SpacetimeMichael Silberstein0William Stuckey1Department of Philosophy, Elizabethtown College, Elizabethtown, PA 17022, USADepartment of Philosophy, Elizabethtown College, Elizabethtown, PA 17022, USAHerein we are not interested in merely using dynamical systems theory, graph theory, information theory, etc., to model the relationship between brain dynamics and networks, and various states and degrees of conscious processes. We are interested in the question of how phenomenal conscious experience and fundamental physics are most deeply related. Any attempt to mathematically and formally model conscious experience and its relationship to physics must begin with some metaphysical assumption in mind about the nature of conscious experience, the nature of matter and the nature of the relationship between them. These days the most prominent metaphysical fixed points are strong emergence or some variant of panpsychism. In this paper we will detail another distinct metaphysical starting point known as neutral monism. In particular, we will focus on a variant of the neutral monism of William James and Bertrand Russell. Rather than starting with physics as fundamental, as both strong emergence and panpsychism do in their own way, our goal is to suggest how one might derive fundamental physics from neutral monism. Thus, starting with two axioms grounded in our characterization of neutral monism, we will sketch out a derivation of and explanation for some key features of relativity and quantum mechanics that suggest a unity between those two theories that is generally unappreciated. Our mode of explanation throughout will be of the principle as opposed to constructive variety in something like Einstein’s sense of those terms. We will argue throughout that a bias towards property dualism and a bias toward reductive dynamical and constructive explanation lead to the hard problem and the explanatory gap in consciousness studies, and lead to serious unresolved problems in fundamental physics, such as the measurement problem and the mystery of entanglement in quantum mechanics and lack of progress in producing an empirically well-grounded theory of quantum gravity. We hope to show that given our take on neutral monism and all that follows from it, the aforementioned problems can be satisfactorily resolved leaving us with a far more intuitive and commonsense model of the relationship between conscious experience and physics.https://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/22/5/551neutral monismpanpsychismstrong emergencehard problemexplanatory gapdelayed choice quantum eraser
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael Silberstein
William Stuckey
spellingShingle Michael Silberstein
William Stuckey
Re-Thinking the World with Neutral Monism:Removing the Boundaries Between Mind, Matter, and Spacetime
Entropy
neutral monism
panpsychism
strong emergence
hard problem
explanatory gap
delayed choice quantum eraser
author_facet Michael Silberstein
William Stuckey
author_sort Michael Silberstein
title Re-Thinking the World with Neutral Monism:Removing the Boundaries Between Mind, Matter, and Spacetime
title_short Re-Thinking the World with Neutral Monism:Removing the Boundaries Between Mind, Matter, and Spacetime
title_full Re-Thinking the World with Neutral Monism:Removing the Boundaries Between Mind, Matter, and Spacetime
title_fullStr Re-Thinking the World with Neutral Monism:Removing the Boundaries Between Mind, Matter, and Spacetime
title_full_unstemmed Re-Thinking the World with Neutral Monism:Removing the Boundaries Between Mind, Matter, and Spacetime
title_sort re-thinking the world with neutral monism:removing the boundaries between mind, matter, and spacetime
publisher MDPI AG
series Entropy
issn 1099-4300
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Herein we are not interested in merely using dynamical systems theory, graph theory, information theory, etc., to model the relationship between brain dynamics and networks, and various states and degrees of conscious processes. We are interested in the question of how phenomenal conscious experience and fundamental physics are most deeply related. Any attempt to mathematically and formally model conscious experience and its relationship to physics must begin with some metaphysical assumption in mind about the nature of conscious experience, the nature of matter and the nature of the relationship between them. These days the most prominent metaphysical fixed points are strong emergence or some variant of panpsychism. In this paper we will detail another distinct metaphysical starting point known as neutral monism. In particular, we will focus on a variant of the neutral monism of William James and Bertrand Russell. Rather than starting with physics as fundamental, as both strong emergence and panpsychism do in their own way, our goal is to suggest how one might derive fundamental physics from neutral monism. Thus, starting with two axioms grounded in our characterization of neutral monism, we will sketch out a derivation of and explanation for some key features of relativity and quantum mechanics that suggest a unity between those two theories that is generally unappreciated. Our mode of explanation throughout will be of the principle as opposed to constructive variety in something like Einstein’s sense of those terms. We will argue throughout that a bias towards property dualism and a bias toward reductive dynamical and constructive explanation lead to the hard problem and the explanatory gap in consciousness studies, and lead to serious unresolved problems in fundamental physics, such as the measurement problem and the mystery of entanglement in quantum mechanics and lack of progress in producing an empirically well-grounded theory of quantum gravity. We hope to show that given our take on neutral monism and all that follows from it, the aforementioned problems can be satisfactorily resolved leaving us with a far more intuitive and commonsense model of the relationship between conscious experience and physics.
topic neutral monism
panpsychism
strong emergence
hard problem
explanatory gap
delayed choice quantum eraser
url https://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/22/5/551
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