Yesterday I read this blog post https://ian-wardell.blogspot.com/2024/03...e.html?m=1 which is in itself a defence of substance dualism against “Ralph Lewis's Arguments against an Afterlife” (posted on psychologytoday.com). Ralph partially bases his attack on substance dualism using the classic argument of the Conservation Laws of energy and momentum:
This argument is ancient and were already formulated back in the days of Leibniz who wrote more than 200 years ago
I have been doing some digging on the Internet and found this interesting article from 2020 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9038821/ where the author examines the strength of the “Conservation Laws” argument. He concludes from theoretical reasoning that modern understandings of conditionality and locality in conservation laws show that conservation laws are not absolute but conditional on certain assumptions, which are often not met in scenarios involving immaterial influences such as those proposed by substance dualism. More specifically he reasons:
Conditionality:
Conservation laws, like energy conservation, hold true in closed systems without external influences. If an external influence, such as a non-physical mind, interacts with a physical system, the system is no longer closed.
Therefore, it is incorrect to assume that energy conservation must hold in the presence of such external influences. The objection that dualism violates conservation laws assumes without proof that these laws apply universally, even when there is an external influence, which is a question-begging assumption.
Locality:
Conservation laws are fundamentally local, meaning they apply at each point in space and time, not just globally across the entire universe.
This locality means that if a non-physical mind acts on a body, the energy or momentum might not be conserved in that local interaction, but this does not imply a global failure of conservation laws.
The interaction might result in local non-conservation, but this can be very small and localized, not affecting the broader physical systems significantly.
Combining Conditionality and Locality:
Because these conservation laws are conditional and local, their apparent violations due to mind-body interactions might be minor and not easily detectable. This means that minor, localized non-conservation events caused by immaterial influences don't necessarily lead to catastrophic failures in physical theories.
In a physical system influenced by a non-physical mind, what is observed as energy non-conservation locally (such as in a brain) does not imply that energy is not conserved globally. The localized effect might be within the tolerances of physical laws as understood in broader contexts.
Therefore, the modern understanding of conservation laws as conditional and local implies that the common objection to dualism based on these laws does not hold up because it fails to consider these nuanced aspects. This nuanced understanding shows that dualism does not necessarily violate conservation laws in a way that would falsify it. Instead, these laws simply don't apply universally in the same way when external influences are considered, allowing room for dualism without the supposed fatal flaw of violating fundamental physics.
I understand this reasoning is difficult to digest, but it indicates that it’s not straight forward to dismiss substance dualism by basic physics.
The author of the article eventually concludes that the strongest arguments against substance dualism derives from neuroscience (which I’m personally rather skeptical about) and then for obscure reasons I don’t understand, general relativity.
Ralph Lewis also makes other points which Ian addresses in his blog post. I just wanted to deep dive into the argument regarding the conservation laws with this post.
(This post was last modified: 2024-06-05, 04:13 PM by sbu. Edited 5 times in total.)
Quote:Dualism so fundamentally contradicts the foundations and entire accumulated evidence of modern science that in order for it to be true, we would have to start rebuilding modern science from the ground up. If dualism turned out to be true, it would also be a complete mystery or fluke as to how most of our advanced technologies (including all of our electronics) work at all, since their design and engineering are based on the very principles that would necessarily be entirely invalidated if dualism were true.
This argument is ancient and were already formulated back in the days of Leibniz who wrote more than 200 years ago
Quote:… two important truths on this subject have been discovered since M. Descartes’ day. The first is that the quantity of absolute force which is in fact conserved is different from the quantity of movement, as I have demonstrated elsewhere. The second discovery is that the same direction is still conserved in all bodies together that are assumed as interacting, in whatever way they come into collision. If this rule had been known to M. Descartes, he would have taken the direction of bodies to be as independent of the soul as their force; and I believe that that would have led direct [sic] to the Hypothesis of Pre-established Harmony, whither these same rules have led me. For apart from the fact that the physical influence of one of these substances on the other is inexplicable, I recognized that without a complete derangement of the laws of Nature the soul could not act physically upon the body
I have been doing some digging on the Internet and found this interesting article from 2020 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9038821/ where the author examines the strength of the “Conservation Laws” argument. He concludes from theoretical reasoning that modern understandings of conditionality and locality in conservation laws show that conservation laws are not absolute but conditional on certain assumptions, which are often not met in scenarios involving immaterial influences such as those proposed by substance dualism. More specifically he reasons:
Conditionality:
Conservation laws, like energy conservation, hold true in closed systems without external influences. If an external influence, such as a non-physical mind, interacts with a physical system, the system is no longer closed.
Therefore, it is incorrect to assume that energy conservation must hold in the presence of such external influences. The objection that dualism violates conservation laws assumes without proof that these laws apply universally, even when there is an external influence, which is a question-begging assumption.
Locality:
Conservation laws are fundamentally local, meaning they apply at each point in space and time, not just globally across the entire universe.
This locality means that if a non-physical mind acts on a body, the energy or momentum might not be conserved in that local interaction, but this does not imply a global failure of conservation laws.
The interaction might result in local non-conservation, but this can be very small and localized, not affecting the broader physical systems significantly.
Combining Conditionality and Locality:
Because these conservation laws are conditional and local, their apparent violations due to mind-body interactions might be minor and not easily detectable. This means that minor, localized non-conservation events caused by immaterial influences don't necessarily lead to catastrophic failures in physical theories.
In a physical system influenced by a non-physical mind, what is observed as energy non-conservation locally (such as in a brain) does not imply that energy is not conserved globally. The localized effect might be within the tolerances of physical laws as understood in broader contexts.
Therefore, the modern understanding of conservation laws as conditional and local implies that the common objection to dualism based on these laws does not hold up because it fails to consider these nuanced aspects. This nuanced understanding shows that dualism does not necessarily violate conservation laws in a way that would falsify it. Instead, these laws simply don't apply universally in the same way when external influences are considered, allowing room for dualism without the supposed fatal flaw of violating fundamental physics.
I understand this reasoning is difficult to digest, but it indicates that it’s not straight forward to dismiss substance dualism by basic physics.
The author of the article eventually concludes that the strongest arguments against substance dualism derives from neuroscience (which I’m personally rather skeptical about) and then for obscure reasons I don’t understand, general relativity.
Ralph Lewis also makes other points which Ian addresses in his blog post. I just wanted to deep dive into the argument regarding the conservation laws with this post.