Ross: The Immaterial Aspects of Thoughts
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Feser: Kripke, Ross, and the Immaterial Aspects of Thought
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Reading Aquinas: Understanding James Ross’s paper: Immaterial Aspects Of Thought
Quote:There is a larger and bolder project of epistemology naturalized, namely, to explain human thought in terms available to physical science, particularly the aspects of thought that carry truth values,and have formal features,like validity or mathematical form.That project seems to have hit a stonewall,a difficulty so grave that philosophers dismiss the underlying argument,or adopt a cavalier certainty that our judgments only simulate certain pure forms and never are real cases of, e.g., conjunction,modus ponens,adding,or genuine validity. The difficulty is that,in principle,such truth-carrying thoughts cannot be wholly physical (though they might have a physical medium), because they have features that no physical thing or process can have at all.
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Feser: Kripke, Ross, and the Immaterial Aspects of Thought
Quote:Abstract.
James Ross developed a simple and powerful argument for the immateriality of the intellect, an argument rooted in the Aristotelian-Scholastic tradition while drawing on ideas from analytic philosophers Saul Kripke, W. V. Quine, and Nelson Goodman. This paper provides a detailed exposition and defense of the argument, filling out aspects that Ross left sketchy. In particular, it elucidates the argument’s relationship to its Aristotelian-Scholastic and analytic antecedents, and to Kripke’s work especially; and it responds to objections or potential objections to be found in the work of contemporary writers like Peter Dillard, Robert Pasnau, Brian Leftow, and Paul Churchland.
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Reading Aquinas: Understanding James Ross’s paper: Immaterial Aspects Of Thought
Quote:It took a lot to get the gist of Ross’s paper, primarily because of his writing style, thick as it is with terminology. But I’ve been able to defog it (with the help of additional explicatory material from Edward Feser’s blog and some guy who goes by the handle ‘Codgitator’ who does not infrequently comment on Feser’s blog in defense of Ross’s thesis), and it does very much seem like a knockdown-argument against physicalism.
'Historically, we may regard materialism as a system of dogma set up to combat orthodox dogma...Accordingly we find that, as ancient orthodoxies disintegrate, materialism more and more gives way to scepticism.'
- Bertrand Russell
(This post was last modified: 2018-12-04, 10:43 PM by Sciborg_S_Patel.)
- Bertrand Russell