Mental representation and causal explanation.

Mental causation has been a concern in the philosophy of mind since Descartes. Intuitively, thoughts are causes of behavior, and they are causes of behavior in virtue of their mental properties. The computational theory of mind views thoughts as symbol tokenings, and thus as causes. However, if the...

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Main Author: Kazez, Jean Rahel.
Other Authors: Cummins, Rob
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 1990
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/185312
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1853122015-10-23T04:31:08Z Mental representation and causal explanation. Kazez, Jean Rahel. Cummins, Rob Goldman, Alvin Pollock, John Philosophy Psychology. Mental causation has been a concern in the philosophy of mind since Descartes. Intuitively, thoughts are causes of behavior, and they are causes of behavior in virtue of their mental properties. The computational theory of mind views thoughts as symbol tokenings, and thus as causes. However, if the computational theory of mind is correct, the causal efficacy of mental properties is problematic. A representation tokening causes further representation tokenings or behaviors in virtue of local computational properties of the representation. Mental properties could explain mental causation as well, if they could be identified with, or they supervened upon, causally relevant computational properties of representations. But on plausible construals of the nature of mental properties, they do not. If mental properties are assigned relevance in our mental lives, the result is a picture in which the effects of mental events are overdetermined by their mental and physical properties. Since such overdetermination is implausible, the causal efficacy of mental properties should be denied. A number of philosophers have proposed sufficient conditions for causal relevance and argued that mental properties meet those conditions. The role of mental properties in laws or counterfactuals is taken to be pivotal. But there are serious problems with each of the proposed accounts. A property can play an explanatory role, even if it does not play a causal-explanatory role. The point of assigning mental properties to representations is to account for a system's information processing capacities. Mental properties can play this explanatory role without accounting for cause-effect relationships. The causal efficacy of mental properties can be denied, while an explanatory role for mental properties is maintained. 1990 text Dissertation-Reproduction (electronic) http://hdl.handle.net/10150/185312 709922420 9114061 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Philosophy
Psychology.
spellingShingle Philosophy
Psychology.
Kazez, Jean Rahel.
Mental representation and causal explanation.
description Mental causation has been a concern in the philosophy of mind since Descartes. Intuitively, thoughts are causes of behavior, and they are causes of behavior in virtue of their mental properties. The computational theory of mind views thoughts as symbol tokenings, and thus as causes. However, if the computational theory of mind is correct, the causal efficacy of mental properties is problematic. A representation tokening causes further representation tokenings or behaviors in virtue of local computational properties of the representation. Mental properties could explain mental causation as well, if they could be identified with, or they supervened upon, causally relevant computational properties of representations. But on plausible construals of the nature of mental properties, they do not. If mental properties are assigned relevance in our mental lives, the result is a picture in which the effects of mental events are overdetermined by their mental and physical properties. Since such overdetermination is implausible, the causal efficacy of mental properties should be denied. A number of philosophers have proposed sufficient conditions for causal relevance and argued that mental properties meet those conditions. The role of mental properties in laws or counterfactuals is taken to be pivotal. But there are serious problems with each of the proposed accounts. A property can play an explanatory role, even if it does not play a causal-explanatory role. The point of assigning mental properties to representations is to account for a system's information processing capacities. Mental properties can play this explanatory role without accounting for cause-effect relationships. The causal efficacy of mental properties can be denied, while an explanatory role for mental properties is maintained.
author2 Cummins, Rob
author_facet Cummins, Rob
Kazez, Jean Rahel.
author Kazez, Jean Rahel.
author_sort Kazez, Jean Rahel.
title Mental representation and causal explanation.
title_short Mental representation and causal explanation.
title_full Mental representation and causal explanation.
title_fullStr Mental representation and causal explanation.
title_full_unstemmed Mental representation and causal explanation.
title_sort mental representation and causal explanation.
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 1990
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/185312
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