Using systems theory to do philosophy: One approach, and some suggested terminology.
This thesis employs perspectives inspired by General Systems Theory to address issues in philosophy, including moral philosophy and philosophy of mind. I present an overview of a range of ideas from the study of physical systems that may be used to provide a firm physicalist foundation to exploratio...
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University of Canterbury. Philosophy and Religious Studies
2008
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ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-10222015-03-30T15:27:41ZUsing systems theory to do philosophy: One approach, and some suggested terminology.Ingram, DavidSystems theorytopologyentropyprobabilitygravitytimeChaos theoryquantum mechanicsinformation theorycomplexity theorycomplex dynamicsself-organisationgame theoryethicsconsciousnessevolution of languagegrammarThis thesis employs perspectives inspired by General Systems Theory to address issues in philosophy, including moral philosophy and philosophy of mind. I present an overview of a range of ideas from the study of physical systems that may be used to provide a firm physicalist foundation to explorations of some common questions in philosophy. I divide these topics into three categories: the Physical Category, the Relevance Category and the Signal Elements Category. I interpret concepts from General Systems Theory, including information and entropy, in a way that I believe facilitates their incorporation into philosophical discussion. I also explain various points arising from General Systems Theory, such as order and disorder, stability, complexity, and self-organisation, and show how ideas from these areas can be applied to certain philosophical problems. I explain relevance in terms of stability, in order to link these scientific perspectives to questions in moral philosophy. I suggest a possible physical foundation for a theory of morality, which takes the form of a variety of Utilitarianism, intended to balance the competing needs of open systems to manage entropy. Such a theory of morality must be capable of dealing with limitations arising from the physicality of information; I propose game theory as a solution to this problem. This thesis also covers issues connected to the above points regarding the nature of consciousness and communication. In particular, I examine the role of linguistic associations in consciousness; and some related features of language and other non-linear representational schemes.University of Canterbury. Philosophy and Religious Studies2008-09-07T21:31:58Z2008-09-07T21:31:58Z2007Electronic thesis or dissertationTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/1022enNZCUCopyright David Ingramhttp://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml |
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Systems theory topology entropy probability gravity time Chaos theory quantum mechanics information theory complexity theory complex dynamics self-organisation game theory ethics consciousness evolution of language grammar |
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Systems theory topology entropy probability gravity time Chaos theory quantum mechanics information theory complexity theory complex dynamics self-organisation game theory ethics consciousness evolution of language grammar Ingram, David Using systems theory to do philosophy: One approach, and some suggested terminology. |
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This thesis employs perspectives inspired by General Systems Theory to address issues in philosophy, including moral philosophy and philosophy of mind. I present an overview of a range of ideas from the study of physical systems that may be used to provide a firm physicalist foundation to explorations of some common questions in philosophy. I divide these topics into three categories: the Physical Category, the Relevance Category and the Signal Elements Category. I interpret concepts from General Systems Theory, including information and entropy, in a way that I believe facilitates their incorporation into philosophical discussion. I also explain various points arising from General Systems Theory, such as order and disorder, stability, complexity, and self-organisation, and show how ideas from these areas can be applied to certain philosophical problems. I explain relevance in terms of stability, in order to link these scientific perspectives to questions in moral philosophy. I suggest a possible physical foundation for a theory of morality, which takes the form of a variety of Utilitarianism, intended to balance the competing needs of open systems to manage entropy. Such a theory of morality must be capable of dealing with limitations arising from the physicality of information; I propose game theory as a solution to this problem. This thesis also covers issues connected to the above points regarding the nature of consciousness and communication. In particular, I examine the role of linguistic associations in consciousness; and some related features of language and other non-linear representational schemes. |
author |
Ingram, David |
author_facet |
Ingram, David |
author_sort |
Ingram, David |
title |
Using systems theory to do philosophy: One approach, and some suggested terminology. |
title_short |
Using systems theory to do philosophy: One approach, and some suggested terminology. |
title_full |
Using systems theory to do philosophy: One approach, and some suggested terminology. |
title_fullStr |
Using systems theory to do philosophy: One approach, and some suggested terminology. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Using systems theory to do philosophy: One approach, and some suggested terminology. |
title_sort |
using systems theory to do philosophy: one approach, and some suggested terminology. |
publisher |
University of Canterbury. Philosophy and Religious Studies |
publishDate |
2008 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10092/1022 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT ingramdavid usingsystemstheorytodophilosophyoneapproachandsomesuggestedterminology |
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1716798068669546496 |