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<title>The career of epistemological philosophy</title>
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<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif"><b>T<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="TtsOtkCRS10_09" align="right" hspace="5" width="250" height="42" border="0">he
career of epistemological philosophy.</b></font> Pre-Socratic
philosophy was a radical random variation on the arguments of
rational level culture, and it may also have been tried out in other
civilizations. But only in Western civilization did it give rise to
epistemological philosophy and put the linguistic structures
generating social institutions on the philosophical level of
neurological organization. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif">A<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="TtsOtkCRS10_10" align="right" hspace="5" width="250" height="23" border="0">ncient
and medieval epistemological philosophy. </font>Epistemological
philosophy began when Plato discovered a convincing way of
constructing an argument that would explain the validity of all first
level arguments based on perception and desire. It was also an
explanation of everything, but it was not based on a theory about
change and diversity, that is, about efficient causes. Instead, it
was a theory about the nature of reason based only reflective
understanding, or the capacity of subjects to use rational
imagination to explain rational causation. It did entail an
explanation of the nature of the substances constituting the world,
but that was an afterthought, for its approach to philosophy was
epistemological. The theories about the nature of reason and the
nature of consciousness that we have derived from our ontological
foundation fit together as a way of understanding the basic structure
of epistemological arguments. We need only consider what rational
subjects had to work with, when they turned to reflective
understanding for a theory about how we know about the world, because
there are only certain ways that those elements can be used to
explain the validity of the reasons used in the ordinary arguments of
rational level culture. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">What
represents the current scene to the subject are the telesensory
images that are currently being used (in conjunction with input from
the current bodily condition) to construct a <i>local image</i>, and
together with the representation of the body itself, that is the
subjects perception of the world. But the local image (and the
body image to which it is related) generated from current sensory
input are embedded within a faculty of rational imagination, and
thus, rational subjects are able to see actual states against the
background of what is possible by efficient causation by using covert
behavior to call up all sort of images in relation to them. Consider
the aspects of the world that are represented in rational
imagination. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><i>Spatial
imagination </i>makes it possible to call up sequences of images
representing the effects of the locomotion (or motion) in relation to
other objects within the local scene and to call up sequences of
<i>local images </i>(that have been recorded in memory as a map of
ones territory) representing locomotion beyond the local scene. Or
spatial imagination can be used more generally to think about the
effects locomotion and turning (or motion and change of direction)
within the local scene, in relation to a purely imaginary local
scene, or in the abstract (because the same behavioral schemata are
used relative to different <i>local images</i>).</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><i>Structural
imagination </i>makes it possible to call up sequences of telesensory
images, or <i>object images,</i> representing the effects of
manipulating objects in the local scene, such as rotating and
twisting them, and it too can be used abstractly to think about the
geometrical structures of objects in space.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><i>Naturalistic
imagination</i>, which comes with the ability to use natural
sentences, makes it possible to call up sequences of images, or
<i>naturalistic images, </i>representing the states of affairs that
make natural sentences true, so that together with (particular and
general) beliefs about regularities (which are either built into the
structure of imagination or acquired from experience), rational
imagination can represent their effects in the natural world.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><i>Rational
imagination</i>, which comes with the ability to use psychological
sentences, makes it possible to call up sequences of images as
psychological predicates (or <i>psychological images</i>) and to
predicate them of objects in space that are subjects, and this
ability to think about psychological states is the ability to
understand how they are causes or effects of other psychological
states, including their role as reasons (or causes that are
represented as causes as part of the process of causing beliefs or
behavior). </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Perception
and rational imagination both have an appearance to the subject.
These images are certain configurations of neurons firing in various
2-D arrays of neurons that are connected by projections between the
thalamus and neocortex (or between regions of neocortex), and their
firings are all synchronized by the thalamus insofar as they have to
do with the same objects. That is, the brain processes the
information contained as patterns of firing in 2-D arrays of neurons,
and thus, what happens in the brain is a highly structured in both
space and time. But what is more, the joint firings of those neurons
is like a complex antenna that generates a steam of photons, and the
intrinsic natures of the photons being given off by the active brain
are phenomenal properties which make the rational subject conscious. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Perception
and rational imagination have different appearances, because the
images they involve are caused in basically different ways.
Perceptual images come from sensory input (and involve projections
from the sensory organs through the thalamus to the neocortex),
whereas images of rational imagination come from covert behavior
operating on memory (and involve only regions of neocortex beyond
those registering sensory input). This makes these two kinds of
images appear quite different from the point of view of the subject
reflecting on them. But in both cases, objects seem to be present to
the subject, in one case, as objects of perception, and in the other
case, as objects of reflection. </font></font>
</p>
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" name="HistPhiloOP" align="bottom" width="400" height="250" border="0"></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
only plausible way to construct an epistemological argument is to
assume that the appearances of these objects in consciousness involve
an intuition of objects that exist independently of the subject, for
there is nothing else to reflect on, except the feelings or emotions
associated with desires (that is, the goal selection system). </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
images of perception naturally appear to be objects in space, because
the local image represents the objects as having locations in space
relative to ones body. Though the telesensory images are certain
groups of neurons firing in 2-D arrays that are located in certain
regions of the thalamus and neocortex, they seem to be located in
space, because as we have seen, they are combined with other
telesensory and somatosensory images as part of a <i>local image</i>,
and with spatial imagination, the subject is able to think about the
effects of motion relative to them by calling up sequences of images
in imagination. The sensory images of objects are seen, therefore,
against the background of what is possible by motion, and since that
is how the subject understands the structure of space, the objects
appear to be located in space. And it is a qualitatively rich
appearance, because in conscious subjects, what is happening
throughout the brain is registered in the structures of the photons
being generated by it. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Naïve
(or direct) realism about perception, as this way of interpreting
perceptual images is called, is the natural attitude, because there
is ordinarily no reason to recognize the difference between
perceptual representations in the brain and the objects in space they
represent outside the brain. The overt behavior of ones body
actually changes the perceptual images in just the ways one expects.
Thus, it is natural to think of perception as an immediate intuition
of objects in space, including ones own body, as if the objects
themselves were immediately present to the subject.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Objects
of reflection, such as the <i>object images </i>representing objects
of various kinds that evolve as the meanings of some general terms,
also have an appearance, albeit one that is less vivid, detailed, and
persistent, because they are images in rational imagination. They
might also ordinarily be taken as objects present to mind by way of
intuition, but they do not act like objects in space. They may be
imagined as located in space relative to objects that are perceived,
but unlike the latter, what changes them is not the overt behavior of
ones body, but the covert behavior by which one calls up images
from memory. Imagined object are easier to handle. Not only are they
not constrained like objects in space, but neither do they appear to
be in time. Though <i>object images </i>involve sequences of images
in imagination, such sequences are simply the meanings of the general
terms. The meaning of “cube” or “tree,” for example, may
include a sequence of images representing the effects of rotating it
or moving around to see it from the other side, but that is
understood to be just a way of thinking about the nature of the cube
or the nature of the tree. The object itself is unchanging and, thus,
not in time. The natural attitude is, therefore, to assume that the
objects of reflection are in the mind, that is, merely subjective. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">However,
since objects of reflection are appearances quite on a par with
objects of perception, it is <i>possible </i>to think of both as
intuitions of objects that somehow exist independently of the
subject. Thus, just as the tree that is perceived is seen a located
outside the subject in space, so the image of reflection that is the
meaning of “tree” can be seen as located outside the body in some
other way. The connection between these independently existing
objects affords an explanation of the objects of perception, for it
is possible that the objects of reflection are also somehow what
causes the objects of perception to have the natures they seem to
have. That is what Plato did by positing the existence of Forms in
the realm of Being beyond the visible objects in the realm of
Becoming.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><img 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" name="HistPhilAncient" align="bottom" width="400" height="250" border="0"></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">This
theory about the nature of reason overcomes, therefore, the dichotomy
between the objects of naturalistic and reflective understanding. It
uses it as an explanation of what exists in the world. But that was
not, of course, the only cause of Platos metaphysics. Plato was
looking for a metaphysics that would also explain the nature of
goodness, that is, a way of overcoming the dichotomy between the true
and the good and the dichotomy between the good of satisfying animal
desire and a higher good (self interest and spiritual interest).</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
dichotomies that philosophy must overcome include not only the
difference between the science of nature and the science of subjects,
but also the difference between the true and the good. In addition to
cognizing the true, reason has the power to guide behavior, and thus,
it also seeks to know what is good. Practical arguments became the
focus of attention after the Persian wars, when Athens was the
dominant city-state and the exchange of arguments was supported by
the hiring of teachers, called sophists, to train the sons of the
wealthy to be leaders in the promising, new age of independence. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
sophists were itinerants, traveling from one city state to another,
gathering knowledge as well as teaching, and this cosmopolitan
experience led them to conclude that the standards of justice and
other virtues are conventional, that is, true merely because they are
believed to be true in a society. In this context, Socrates was on
the side of traditional religion, holding that the good is objective,
or something about the world that could be known like natural
science. But instead of the dogmatism of traditional religion,
Socrates insisted that knowledge of the good must be a kind of
knowledge that makes the knower virtuous, so that a rational being
does the good because it is good and he understands why it is good.
That is the meaning of the Socratic principle, that knowledge is
virtue. There must be an understanding of the nature of goodness that
is so deep that it explains to rational beings why they ought to
pursue it. The Socratic principle posed very sharply the problem that
philosophy must solve in explaining the relationship of the good and
the true. For how can any mere fact about the world show that
something is good in a way that gives rational beings a sufficient
motive to do it?</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Socrates
was implicitly asking for a philosophical argument, because he wanted
to know what makes all good thing good, which would explain why
ordinary arguments about what is good are valid (when they are). And
it was his attempt to answer Socrates challenge that led Plato to
discover the epistemological approach to explaining all the arguments
of rational culture. Recognizing that it is possible to think of
certain objects of reflection as objects existing independently of
the subject in much the same way as objects of perception, as
explained above, Plato argued that what makes visible things good is
that they are participating or imitating Forms in the realm of Being.
This meant that he had to hold that the Forms in the realm of Being
are themselves good, and so he argued that all the other Forms follow
from the Form of the Good. This was not very satisfying explanation
of the nature of goodness, but the transcendence of the realm of
Being, or its existence outside space and time, made it possible to
think that Being could somehow be the source of goodness. Thus, his
metaphysics of Being and Becoming could be used to justify arguments
about what is good in a fundamentally different way from ordinary
arguments of rational culture, and it was the same way in which he
could justify arguments about what is true in the natural world. In
both cases, it had to do with visible objects imitating the Forms.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">That
Platos goal was to construct a new kind of argument that would
explain the validity of the arguments of rational culture is also
evident in his use of this metaphysics to overcome the third
dichotomy, between individual and spiritual interest. He argued in
<i>The Republic</i> that the state is the individual “writ large.”
He showed that the soul of the individual rational subject has three
parts: reason, appetites, and a “spirited element” which enabled
reason to take control of the body away from the appetites (or what
we have found to be the desire to submit to reason). He showed that
the functions of these three elements also had to be served in the
state by three classes of citizens: rulers, ordinary producers, and
an army/police force to enforce the rule of the leaders. He suggested
that both are good for the same reason, because of the harmony among
the three parts required by their Forms. In both cases, it meant that
reason, with the aid of an animal-like power (the spirited element),
would prevail over mere animal desire. Thus, Plato defended a view
which subordinates the individual to the good of the spiritual animal
as a whole in a way that seems almost totalitarian from the
contemporary perspective. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
subsequent developments of epistemological philosophy during the
ancient and medieval period are a story about attempts to solve
problems it caused and how its marriage with Christianity eventually
made philosophy the foundation of subsequent Western culture. Only
the highlights need be mentioned here, for our goal is merely to
sketch the career of epistemological philosophy in order to show how
its various forms are variations on the same theme. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">As
even Plato recognized, the gulf between Being and Becoming is a major
problem with his metaphysics. How is it possible for such opposite
kinds of entities as unchanging objects of rational intuition and
changing objects of perception to be related as parts of the same
world? Plato found himself holding (even in the <i>Timaeus</i>, where
Becoming is explained as being constituted by the “receptacle,”
or space, and “moving images” of the Forms) that they are
different substances, and in order to defend his epistemological
argument for the independent existence of the Forms, it was necessary
to explain how these two substances are related to one another. It
was Aristotle who attempted to solve that problem. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Aristotle
accepted Platos epistemological approach to philosophy and posited
objects of rational intuition as fundamentally different from the
objects of perception. However, he insisted that they were not
different substances, but merely irreducibly different aspects of the
same substances: essential forms and matter. This afforded Aristotle
a more convincing explanation of the natural world, because he could
insist that just as the material aspect of particular substances
makes them able to act on one another and, thereby, account for
efficient causes, so the formal aspect of particular substances makes
them subject to final causation, that is, the tendency of essential
forms that are merely potential to become actual, and thereby account
for functional explanations. This teleological view of nature enabled
Aristotle to account for the regular changes observed in biological
organisms, and he extended the same kind of explanation to physics
and astronomy. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Teleology
gave Aristotle a theory about how the good is related to the true
that resembled Platos, because he could hold that what is good for
any substance is the full actualization of its essential form. The
difference is that, having denied the existence of a realm of Being,
Aristotle could not hold that the essential forms are explained by
the nature of goodness (The Good Itself, as Plato called it). He had
to argue that the good is different for different substances (and,
thus, that the only reason it is good is that its essential form
happens to exist in the world). Aristotle attempted to explain the
relationship between individual interest and spiritual interest by
holding that rational animals are essentially social (though he did
not explain how substances with one essential form could jointly
constitute a higher level organism with its own essential form
without giving up their essential form as individuals). </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
difference between essential forms and matter confronted Aristotle,
however, with the same kind of problem that faced Plato, for as he
recognized, there had to be an explanation of the relationship
between them. This led Aristotle to argue in the <i>Metaphysics</i>
that individual substances are basically essential forms and that the
material cause is merely their particular existence, or as it came to
be called, a mere “principle of individuation.” (In terms of the
nature of substance as explained here, Aristotle tried to avoid
holding that form and matter are basically different substances by
reducing the difference between form and matter to the difference
between the essential and the existential aspect of each particular
substance.) </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Though
Aristotle tried to naturalize Platos metaphysics by denying the
existence of a separate realm of Being, Plato and Aristotle were both
realists about forms. Both believed that, in addition to perceptible
objects, there are intelligible objects. But since what they were
talking about were actually images in the faculty of perception and
(certain) images in the faculty of rational imagination, which have a
phenomenal appearance to the subject, it is not surprising that there
is no adequate explanation of the relationship between them when they
are taken to be objects existing independently of the subject,
regardless whether it is conceived as a relationship between visible
objects and Forms or between matter and essential forms. The
inability of realists about forms to formulate a metaphysics that
could explain adequately how they are parts of the same world as
material objects in space led to doubts about their existence, and
thus, realism gave rise to anti-realism. Anti-realism was acted out
mainly during the Roman era. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Philosophy
continued to be discussed by educated people in the Roman empire, but
the two most popular philosophical systems abandoned realism about
forms in favor of materialism. The Epicureans believed in atoms and
the void, and the Stoics believed that the world is constituted by
two kinds of matter, ultimately, active matter and passive matter.
(Active matter replaced essential forms as the cause of the order
found in nature, for it was supposed to give passive matter into all
the proper structures and behavior.) </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Neither was
much concerned about overcoming the dichotomy between naturalistic
and reflective understanding, for both simply took it for granted
that rational subjects are part of nature. But they called themselves
philosophers, because they were interested in overcoming the
dichotomy between the true and the good. They prized Greek philosophy
as the model for the higher form of reasoning that would give them
wisdom, though the kind of wisdom they sought was practical.
Epicureans followed Democritus in defending hedonism, the view that
pleasure is the one and only ultimate good and pain the only ultimate
evil. They used the determinism of atomism to argue that rational
beings cannot help but pursue pleasure and avoid pain. Stoics held
that the good life is to suppress all desire for anything different
from what happens. The believed that everything happens for the best,
because active matter pushed passive matter around in a way that
makes the world as a whole a perfect being. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Even as an
attempt to overcome the dichotomy between the true and the good,
however, Epicureanism and Stoicism were less philosophical arguments
than the attempt to have an alternative to traditional religions in
thinking about how to live. Neither even attempted to explain how the
true makes the good good except to insist that the highest wisdom of
philosophy is to make peace with natural necessity. Epicureans never
tried to explain why there ought to be rational beings in the world
who must pursue pleasure, and the Stoics never explained what it is
that makes the world shaped by active matter perfect. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i>Medieval
epistemological philosophy. </i>Toward the end of the Roman era,
there was a revival of interest in Greek philosophy as a way of
overcoming the dichotomy between naturalistic and reflective
understanding. (Plotinus formulated a variation on Platos
metaphysics that tried to overcome the dualism of Being and Becoming
by taking the ultimate source of everything to be the One and
explaining the rest of the world as levels of emanations from it.)
But Platos dualism is what sealed the marriage of Greek philosophy
with Christianity, giving Western civilization a uniquely
philosophical religion. Later, with the inclusion of Aristotelian
philosophy, its rationalism was complete, and the effect on
subsequent civilization was profound. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
Judeo-Christian belief in a God who created the natural world
combined easily with Platos metaphysical dualism of Being and
Becoming. Being could be reinterpreted as a supreme rational being,
that is, a person. (Plotinus had already portrayed the Forms as
aspects of a self-thinking being in the first emanation from the
One.) Since God created the natural world, it was possible to take
God to be the objective source of goodness that Socrates and Plato
were seeking. Thus, Platos way of overcoming the dichotomy between
reason and nature was resurrected. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">But
Augustine was the matchmaker, and his belief that it was simply the
will of God that made the good good undercut the rationalistic intent
of Socrates and Plato by implying that it is arbitrary. However, with
the rediscovery of Aristotle in the Middle Ages, that defect was
corrected by Aquinas. He argued that what God knows, rather than his
will, explains why the good is good. That is, Gods
self-understanding includes an explanation of the nature of goodness
that reveals why the good ought to exist. And since that knowledge of
the nature of goodness is what guided God to create a world like
ours, His will was free. God turns out to have the wisdom that
Socrates was seeking.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
upshot is that the belief in wisdom as a higher form of argument that
can give us a seamless and complete understanding of the true, the
good, and the beautiful became, though its adoption by Christianity,
a basic principle in the evolution of the arguments about social
roles that generated the institutions of Western civilization as the
Middle Ages gave way to the Renaissance and the modern era began. The
belief that social roles had to be justified by basic principles
about the nature of morality and justice that could be known by
reason, and the belief that each rational subject has a free will
which makes him ultimately responsible for his behavior (and the
eternal fate of their souls) led to institutions that recognized the
autonomy of individuals and the sanctity of contracts. That gave the
edge to institutions of private property and market exchange that
would make it possible for capitalism to evolve, helping to pave the
way for ontological philosophy. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif">M<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="TtsOtkCRS10_11" align="right" hspace="5" width="250" height="24" border="0">odern
epistemological philosophy.</font> In the modern era, epistemological
philosophy took a fundamentally different form, though its theories
of reason were based on the same two elements: perceptual and
rational intuition. The difference was caused by modern science,
another offspring of ancient and medieval epistemological philosophy
which forced the recognition that the ancient atomists had been right
to reject naïve realism about perception.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">By
the renaissance, mathematical arguments had evolved far enough for it
to be recognized that there are quantitatively precise regularities
about what happens in the physical world and that they can be
represented mathematically. Ever since Plato (or even Pythagoras),
mathematical knowledge had been the model for the deeper kind of
knowledge about the world that epistemological philosophy was
supposed to make possible, and mathematical knowledge evolved as
philosophers become mathematicians exchanged mathematical arguments. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">On
the other hand, the belief that the natural world had been created by
God, a rational being, made it plausible to assume that nature had
been designed using mathematical concepts. Mathematics was the
“language of nature,” as Galileo put it, and thus, it was
plausible to assume that the use of mathematics in physics would
enable rational subjects to see into the mind of God. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
first advances in physics were all discoveries of quantitative laws
of nature, including Keplers laws, Galileos laws, and before
long, Newtons laws. Even Copernicus had defended his revolutionary
view of the universe as a mere mathematical possibility. Mathematics
provided the tool that eventually pried open the lid that had long
kept reason from understanding micro level processes, leading
eventually to chemistry, biology and neurophysiology. Since it was a
gift of the previous era of philosophical culture, it is ironic that
its first main effect was to replace naïve (or direct) realism about
perception with critical (or representative) realism.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
belief that the physical world is made up of substances whose ways of
moving and interacting can be described by quantitatively precise
laws of nature was recognized as materialism, but it was a form of
materialism that had to deny that matter has any of the qualitative
properties it seems to have. Those qualitative properties had to be
explained as effects on the subject that are caused by the objects
through chains of causation that could be explained by laws of
nature, which is basically the conclusion to which ancient atomists,
like Democritus, had been driven as the conclusion of Pre-Socratic
philosophy two thousand years earlier, and for much the same reason.
(The belief that shape and size were the only essential properties of
atoms was also a quantitative view of matter.) Modern scientists
understood that perception of objects in space, for example, by
vision, had to be caused in some way by something that travels from
the object across space over time to the subject. And since anatomy
had made it clear by then that the brain was responsible for
receiving sensory input and guiding behavior, there was, within the
body, a second leg of the chain of causes and effects that were
responsible for how it appears to the subject (implying thereby that
the body also lacked the qualitative properties that seemed to be
located in it, such as the feel of hot and cold). </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">This
view had a profound significance for anyone who would attempt to take
the epistemological approach to showing how the validity of all the
arguments of rational culture can be shown by a theory about the
nature of reason that was based on reflective understanding. Ever
since Plato, epistemological philosophy had been founded on <i>naïve
realism</i>, the assumption that the perceptual appearance of the
world is an intuition of objects that exist independently of the
subject (or else are properties of the same kind as those that exist
independently, as Aristotle held). But in the modern period, it was
recognized that the appearances of object in perception have a
basically different nature from what actually exists independently of
the subject. It is called “<i>critical realism</i>,” because it
reject the naïve view, or “representative realism,” in contrast
to the :direct realism” of ancient and medieval philosophy. Since
the perceptual appearances must someone be part of the subject, the
subject himself must be a basically different kind of entity from the
objects in space. It was called the “mind,” and the appearances
of objects in perception were called “ideas of perception.”</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><img 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" name="HistPhiloMod" align="bottom" width="400" height="250" border="0"></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Since the
implications of this line of reasoning are not well recognized, it is
worth emphasizing something about them that confirms our explanation
of how the brain works. It is not only the qualitative properties of
the objects of perception that are in the mind, but also the
appearance that they have locations in space. That is, ideas of
perception include the perception of space itself, not just objects
in it. Consider, for example, the distance between your face and what
you are reading right now. That is a part of space that seems to be
as immediately present as the material object on which these marks
are inscribed. That is, of course, what we would expect, since the
qualitative properties, or sensory qualia, are parts of the
telesensory images that are combined along with input about the
condition of the body in constructing a <i>local image </i>to
represent the local scene. The perception of the distance between
your face and the material object embodying the written words is part
of the understanding one has of space because of how one can imagine
it changing as a result of certain ways of behaving, such as moving
your head, turning the object around or moving your body around in
the local scene, which is itself seen as just part of an entire world
of objects in space. The upshot of this is that what is contained “in
mind” is not just sensory qualia, but also a phenomenal space in
which all those qualia are located. What one naively takes to be the
whole natural word, in other words, is contained in the mind, and
what exists independently of it has an entirely different nature,
even if it is also assumed to be made up of objects in space. The
physical world is made up of material objects in real space. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
modern philosopher who took up the tradition of philosophy and
applied it in the modern era was Descartes, and the form of his
epistemological argument can also be derived from this ontological
explanation of the nature of reason and consciousness. With only
perception and rational intuition to use, Descartes used the latter
to argue for the existence of the objects represented by the former. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Descartes
recognized that the ideas of perception are located in the mind,
distinct from objects existing independently as an external world.
(That was the point of his doubts about perception based on its
similarity to dreaming and the possibility of the ideas being
supplied by an evil demon.) For him, therefore, the way to explain
the validity of the first level arguments about the natural world by
which science was discovering the laws of nature was to show that a
world of the kind discovered by empirical science actually exists.
That is how he would overcome the dichotomy between naturalistic and
reflective understanding. But since his higher level of forensic
organization was based on reflective understanding, the only other
resources that Descartes could use as a deeper “cause” were other
objects of reflection. The ideas of memory and imagination were of
little use, since they obviously came from ideas of perception. But
there were other ideas, which he called “clear and distinct ideas,”
which are certain principles that derive from the structure of the
faculty of rational imagination. They differed from perceptual ideas
in the same way that Platos Forms differed from visible objects,
and the prime examples of such ideas were, once again, those of
mathematics. But since Descartes was a critical realist, he
recognized that clear and distinct ideas are as much part of the mind
and the ideas of perception. Platos rational intuition of
independently existing Forms had become a rational intuition of
necessary truths. Thus, in order for this theory of reason to provide
a deeper cause explaining the validity of the first level arguments
of natural science, he had to argue that clear and distinct ideas
could prove that a world of extension exists outside the mind. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">His famous
argument started with the Cogito, “I think, therefore I am,” his
first clear and distinct idea, and proceeded to use other clear and
distinct ideas to argue for the existence of a God. Gods
perfection precluded His deceiving the finite rational beings He had
created, and thus, Descartes concluded that there is a world existing
external to mind with the essential nature that rational beings can
grasp clearly and distinctly through geometrical reasoning. Thus his
theory about the nature of reason explained the validity of the
arguments of both reflective and naturalistic understanding, and the
proof of the existence of God allowed him to adopt a traditional
theological explanation of the nature of goodness. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Descartes
new way of doing epistemological philosophy was a form of realism,
because it took the ideas that are immediately present to mind as its
foundation and it tried to prove the existence and nature of a world
beyond them. But Descartes argument for the existence of the
external world was not convincing in the end, and no one has been
able to formulate an argument that does what he wanted. Nevertheless,
Descartes set the agenda for all of modern philosophy. It would be a
battle between realists and anti-realists about the external world.
The main obstacle to a proof of the existence of an external world
was the fundamentally different natures of mind and body. As
Descartes pointed out, body is extended and divisible, whereas mind
has a unity that does not admit of such division. That was his
argument for holding that God had created them as different
substances. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The unity
of mind, as we have recognized, is how all the sensory qualia that
seem to be located in different places all have an appearance at once
to the same subject to which other ideas are also appearing.
Consciousness does have a unity that truly does not admit of division
like a material object in space. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">It may be
worth noticing, by the way, that ontological philosophy provides the
kind of argument for the existence of the external world that
Descartes was seeking. He wanted a clear and distinct idea that would
prove the existence and nature of the world external to mind from the
point of view of the rational subject, and that is what is provided
by this explanation of the wholeness of the world. On the assumption
that nothing exists but space and matter (of kinds that explain the
truth of the basic laws of physics), not only does it derive
reproductive global regularities that explain the essential nature of
rational subjects and their place in the world, but it also explains
the nature of their consciousness as the intrinsic natures of bits of
matter continually given off by active brains. Together, as we have
seen, they explains the clear and distinct ideas that Descartes takes
to be indubitable. But this explanation is itself a clear and
distinct idea in Descartes sense. It is distinct in Descartes
sense (that is, separate from and independent of any idea that is not
before the mind), because it is an idea of the whole world, which is
everything that exists. And it is clear in Descartes sense (that
is, with nothing obscure or vague about any of the parts of the idea
that is before the mind), because it is an explanation of the entire
world and everything in it by the basic substances that constitute
its existence. If the rational subject would just look in the right
direction, therefore, he would have a clear and distinct idea that
entails not only his own existence as a conscious mind, but also the
existence and nature of a world that exists independently of mind. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Mind-body
dualism was nevertheless an intractable problem in modern philosophy,
because it is a form of epistemological philosophy which attempts to
explain the validity of ordinary, first level arguments by a theory
about the nature of reason that is based on what can be known about
reason by reflective understanding. Reflective understanding makes
reason seem to be a form of intuition, because all the ideas in the
mind seem to be objects of intuition and clear and distinct ideas are
just a special kind. But if the subject knows that he has ideas (and,
thus, that he exists) because of how they appear, or he knows that
clear and distinct ideas are true because of how they appears, the
reasons that determine his beliefs can hardly be efficient causes
like those that determine what happens in the natural world. Mind
must be a fundamentally different kind of substance from body. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
subsequent history of modern philosophy can be predicted, for it is
the attempt to vindicate Descartes new way of doing
epistemological philosophy by overcoming the problems he encountered
— or else arguing that it cannot be done, that is, defending
anti-realism. In either case, it has to provide some explanation of
the validity, if any, of the arguments of rational level cutlure, not
only in the science of subjects, but also in the science of nature.
At first, it seemed that there must be a way of defending realism
about the external world, since mathematics provides an understanding
of its essential nature. But the difference in nature between body
and mind was even deeper than the difference between Becoming and
Being, the two substances of Platos metaphysics. Modern
philosophers recognized that both realms to which Plato was referring
are in the mind (as the ideas of perception and the clear and
distinct ideas of rational intuition), and thus, what they meant by
the external world was something whose existence Plato did not even
recognize. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Continental
rationalists like Spinoza and Leibniz hoped to defend realism about
the external world by explaining the relationship between mind and
body in a different way from Descartes. Spinoza thought mind and body
were two different essential natures (“attributes”) of a single
substance that constitutes the existence of the entire world, and
Leibniz thought that mind and body were both kinds of minds
(“monads”) whose relationships, like the monads making up the
rest of the world, were a pre-established harmony that God had built
into the world from the beginning. But instead of showing how reason
could know the existence of an external world, the implausibility of
their metaphysical systems brought the whole approach of rationalism
into disrepute.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">British
empiricists, like Locke, Berkeley and Hume, rejected the attempt to
use reason to prove the existence of the external world. But they did
not give up the Cartesian project. Locke attempted, instead, to
explain the validity of the first level arguments of natural science
by showing how they are based on ideas of perception alone. But this
merely confirmed that the existence of the external world cannot be
known in that way, and Berkeley embraced anti-realism about it. Hume
agreed, though he focused his anti-realism on causation, showing that
perception provides no reason for believing efficient-cause
explanations except the regular conjunction of events of those kinds.
Though scientists could not share the philosophers skepticism
about the natural world, they had to agree with empiricists in
rejecting rationalist metaphysics, and empiricist skepticism about
causation put a real limit on the ambitions of natural science,
encouraging natural science to think of its goal as merely
discovering the basic laws of nature. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Kant sought
to overcome the obstacle that mind-body dualism posed for
epistemological philosophy by insisting that the first level
arguments of natural science are really about the phenomenal world,
that is, the world constituted in part by the mind, not about what
exists independently of it. Though Kant did not deny that something
does exist independently of mind, he did deny that such “things in
themselves” are in space or time. Space and time were mere forms of
intuition in the mind. This transformed Cartesian mind-body dualism,
because it was no longer possible even to conceive the nature of what
exists besides mind. But it did not eliminate metaphysical dualism,
because Kant was still a realist about things in themselves outside
the mind. And the acknowledgment of a reality that reason could not
grasp meant that epistemological philosophy had to admit explicitly
that its way of explaining the validity of all the first level
arguments of rational culture did not explain the wholeness of the
world, but only the wholeness of reason itself. This discovery was
more than some defenders of traditional philosophy could accept.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Hegel
sought to overcome the obstacle of recognizing the existence of
something whose nature reason cannot grasp by constructing from the
elements of Kants theory of mind a dialectical theory of reason.
Instead of helping to constitute a merely phenomenal natural world,
as Kant held, Hegel argued that reason constituted the actual natural
world and everything about it. By taking individual rational subjects
to be merely moments in its dialectic, Hegel could insist that he had
shown how reason is able to know the existence and nature of a world
existing independently of each particular mind, thereby defending
realism, in a sense, and giving a philosophical explanation of why
the first level arguments of rational culture (mere “understanding,”
in Hegels view) are valid. But such absolute idealism merely
exposes the real nature of epistemological philosophy as the attempt
to discover the deeper cause of the world that is known to rational
culture in the nature of reason, rather than in the nature of the
world that exists independently of rational beings. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">As
far as goodness is concerned, the medieval theological explanation
was taken more or less for granted during the modern era — until
Hume tried to explain what is good in terms of natural desires and
Hegel tried to explain the nature of goodness by the perfection of
the outcome of his dialectic.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0; page-break-before: always">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif">C<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="TtsOtkCRS10_12" align="right" hspace="5" width="250" height="23" border="0">ontemporary
epistemological philosophy. </font>As modern philosophy was exploring
its crippling tribulations during the seventeenth, eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries, modern science (sponsored by capitalism, the
other offspring besides modern philosophy of ancient and medieval
epistemological philosophy) was advancing, probing ever deeper
beneath the perceptual appearance of the natural world, discovering
the smaller and stranger bits of matter that help (along with space)
constitute what is found in nature. The manifest success of natural
science made it difficult to take absolute idealism seriously in the
end. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Even
epistemologists turned away from Descartes starting point. Instead
of taking the natural world to be something whose existence had to be
inferred on the basis of ideas in the mind, they reverted to common
sense and took the existence of a public world for granted. But that
did not mean that epistemological philosophy had to be abandoned,
because there was another way for philosophers to deploy the same
elements that reflective understanding makes present to rational
subjects as a theory about the nature of reason. And even if the
deeper rational cause it would use to explain the validity of first
level arguments did not add any new kinds of substances to be
realists about, analogous to the Forms (or God) of the
ancient/medieval era or the external world of the modern era, it
could hope to avoid the embarrassing excesses of past metaphysics and
yet root the arguments of rational culture in a firm, epistemological
foundation. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Language
is the object of reflection that had been overlooked by earlier forms
of epistemological philosophy. Plato had simply assumed that words
are simply a way of referring to the Forms that everyone could
rationally intuit, making it possible to describe the visible objects
by the Forms they imitate. Descartes had recognized that the Forms
were just clear and distinct ideas of rational imagination in the
mind, but since the same ideas were supposed to be in every rational
mind, he could also assume that words are just ways of communicating
which abstract ideas speakers were talking about. In both cases,
language played a decidedly secondary role to the main objects of
reflection by which reason was supposed to know about the world. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Words,
and the sentences that they make up, are nonetheless objects that
rational subjects are aware of, and they are different from the
objects that were central to the ancient and modern theories of
reason. Words are perceptible, like other objects in space, when they
are spoken or written. But they are unlike other objects in space,
because they have meanings and they can refer to objects or
properties in the world. To be sure, their meanings had been
explained in ancient and modern philosophy by Forms or ideas in the
mind. But the words were nonetheless different from them, because
they could exist as perceptible objects, and that somehow made it
possible for rational subjects to communicate with one another
through their animal bodies in a world of objects in space. Thus, to
those how accepted natural science, it was plausible to suppose that
the analysis of language would provide an explanation of the nature
of reason that would explain the validity of all the (valid)
arguments of rational level culture (including arguments about
natural and social science, practical as well as theoretical
arguments, and about what is moral as well as what is in ones self
interest). And it would avoid the pitfall of modern philosophy, for
it would not depend on anything that can be known only privately, if
the analysis of language rested on a kind of knowledge about language
that is inherently intersubjective. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Developments
in logic would make language analysis all but irresistible. Given how
important mathematics is to the advance of natural science, problems
encountered in the evolution of mathematical arguments was bound to
focus attention on the nature of formal proofs and logic. As we have
seen (in <font face="Arial, sans-serif">Relations</font>), such
developments took place in the nineteenth and early twentieth
century, giving rise to symbolic logic and the logical analysis of
language (notably, in the work of the early Russell and Frege). Thus,
much as natural science was prospering by making use of developments
in mathematics, it would inevitably occur to some philosophers that
philosophy might prosper by making use of the new developments in
logic. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">When
natural science makes modern epistemological philosophy incredible,
therefore, there is another way of doing epistemological philosophy.
Hence, our ontological explanation of the nature of reason and
consciousness leads us to expect some philosophers to make use of it
during a late phase of evolution during the philosophical spiritual
stage. That would explain what became known as “analytic
philosophy” in Anglo-American philosophy, as we shall see. Much the
same explanation might also be given of contemporary Continental and
its trajectory toward deconstuctionism, though it will not be pursued
here. By the same token, however, ontological philosophy implies that
analytic philosophy (and Continental philosophy) are doomed to fail
for much the same reason as earlier forms of epistemological
philosophy. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Like
all forms of epistemological philosophy, analytic philosophy is the
attempt to found a theory about the nature of reason on what is known
about how we know by reflection (that is, reflective understanding).
It may not seem that public language is an object of reflection.
Words (and sentences) may seem to be objects of perception, because
they occur as material objects in the natural world when they are
spoken or written. Indeed, they can be objects of perception along
with other objects in space. But that is not how they are seen from
the point of view of the rational subject — unless she is a
critical realist and recognizes the difference between the immediate,
phenomenal appearance of the world in perception and the natural
world to which it corresponds. But critical realism is an insight
into the nature of perception (and, thus, reason) that had to be
abandoned in order to avoid the problems of modern philosophy. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Abandoning
the problems of modern philosophy meant giving up the notion that the
natural world is something beyond the world in which rational beings
find themselves. This did not necessarily mean explicitly embracing
naïve realism about perception. But it did preclude making
philosophical hay out of the difference between the perceptual
appearance of the world and what exists independently of it. Thus,
though analytic philosophy did not embrace naïve realism about
perception explicitly, most analytic philosophers did take naïve
realism for granted in practice, because that is the inevitable
effect of abandoning the distinction between the appearance of the
world in perception and the world being perceived. Naïve realism is
our natural attitude. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Thus,
contemporary epistemologists were (or eventually became) naturalists
in the minimal sense of believing in the existence of the world
disclosed by perception, a world that seemed, at least, to be made up
of material objects in space that move and interact over time.
Naturalism in this sense is not only the view of natural science, but
also the common sense view of the world, the vantage from which the
arguments of rational level culture were made.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">It was also
Platos view of the natural world. But unlike Plato, analytic
philosophers recognized that concepts are subjective, that is, parts
of psychological states on which rational subjects could reflect,
using reflective understanding. But they had to avoid making use of
such private objects in their theory about the nature of reason. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Naïve
realism, however, takes what is actually an object of reflection to
be the natural world, and thus, even the public language that is
analyzed by contemporary epistemological philosophy is also an object
of reflection. To be sure, analytic philosophy thinks of words and
sentences as public objects, along with the natural world in which
they occur. But since it takes the words to be meaningful, they are
actually objects of reflection, and their meanings connect the words
to certain objects (or kind of objects) in the world (as their
referents). That is the simplest way that reflective understanding
can use language as theory about the nature of reason. Once the
meanings of words are projected onto the world and appear as public
references, it is possible to explain intersubjectively how sentences
correspond to the world and to consider the validity of arguments for
them.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">As a result
of naïve realism about perception, images in the brain representing
words that are generated by overt verbal behavior are not
distinguished from the words that exist as material objects
independently of the brain. The images are confused with the material
objects themselves, just like the perception of other objects in
space. But since the perceptual images of the words are connected
with images in the faculty of imagination as their meanings, it is
natural to take their meanings to be public as well. That is, the
word seems to be related to an object or objects of some kind, as if
the semantic relation were a direct, public relationship between the
word and object. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="HistPhiloCont" align="bottom" width="400" height="250" border="0"></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">This is a
theory about the nature of reason based on intuition, for it assumes,
in effect, that users of language can intuit their meanings and
references. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">From
our ontological perspective, however, both the words and their
meanings are parts of the linguistic structure that is the structure
of the spiritual animal under the cultural aspect. As such, they are
properties of a material object, albeit a complex material object
with a spiritual nature (that is, a organism in which the use of
language entails both a social and a cultural structure as a whole).
The linguistic structure is a structure of the spiritual animal as a
whole, because it is, in principle, contained completely in every
members brain, as well as in the overt verb behavior by which the
use of language coordinates behavior, like the leaders plan of
social level behavior at the primitive spiritual stage. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">What are
called “abstract objects” are, therefore, just parts of a
property of the spiritual animal (or an aspect of an aspect of a
spiritual material object), and that gives words (and their meanings)
a physical relationship to objects (or kinds of objects), because
culture is part of the behavior guidance system by which the
spiritual animal acts on other objects in space. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">This is not
how it appears, however, to contemporary epistemological
philosophers, for they do not recognize the existence of spiritual
animals. They cannot, because as practicing naïve realists, they do
not recognize the existence of a faculty or rational imagination by
which words as public, overt verbal behavior (spoken or written) is
related to objects (or kinds of objects) in the world. To them it
appears that words have a direct, public relationship to objects (or
kinds of object), at least, at first.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Analytic
philosophy is not always as naïve, however, as it was at first. In
thinking about words as public objects, naturalists were forced to
recognize that they are just sounds or marks made by speakers, which
have only physical properties. But they do have meanings and
referents, and if they are not physical properties of words as
material objects, they must be explained in some other way. And since
there is another way that meaning and reference can be just as public
as the words themselves, it was still possible to do epistemological
philosophy in the contemporary style. There must be a public way of
determining meaning and reference, for otherwise children would be
unable to learn a natural language and it would not be possible to
translate one natural language into another for the first time.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">A less
naïve way of analyzing the meanings and references of words
recognizes that any images that may be associated with the words are
private and that only the words as material objects are public. But
it still conflates the perceptual images of the words with the
physical tokens themselves, and since the relationship between word
and object (and its meaning, whatever that is) must be one that can
be established in terms of what is publicly perceived, it assumes
that language is governed by public rules. The public rules explain
how everyone learns it as they grow up and how it is possible to
translate from one language to another. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">This is
also a theory about the nature of reason that is based on intuition,
though it is indirect. The intuition that users of language have is
that the meanings and references of words must be determined by
public behavior in relation to public objects, if it is not the
public rules themselves. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">In
either case, whether meaning and reference are taken to be inherent
in the public words (and sentences) or they are explained by the
learning of public rules, analytic philosophy is still basically
reflection on language from the point of view of the users of
language, and such a reflective explanation makes the analysis of
language inadequate as a theory about the nature of reason. The
relationship between word and object is not just a relationship of
the kind that can appear to the user of language as she reflects an
language and how it is used, but one that depends on the nature of
the faculties of perception and imagination in the brain and how
those brains are coordinated as parts of a spiritual animal. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">In either
case, meaning and reference are taken to be something intersubjective
in the sense that it either is or can be explained in terms of what
is public to users of language as practicing naïve realists. That
way of analyzing language is the foundation for the theory about the
nature of reason used in analytic philosophy. And what dooms it, like
other forms of epistemological philosophy, is that it is trying to
explain reason by objects that have an appearance to the subject who
reflects on how she knows, in this case, the world as it appears in
perception to naïve realists and the way that language appears to be
public to its users. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">What it
overlooks is how the relationship between word and object is mediated
by a faculty of perception and imagination located in the brain of
each user of language. Words have meanings that are images in a
faculty of imagination, and their references to objects in the world
depend how its representations correspond to aspect of the world —
where the latter is explained, as we have seen, by an isomorphism
between sequences of images that are called up in the brain over time
and the effects of locomotion, manipulation and the like. But the use
of reflection (reflective understanding) to think about language as
something public makes language appear to have a public relationship
to what it represents in the world that does not depend on a faculty
of imagination in the brain, but only on intersubjectively
correctable rules. It makes the semantic relation appear to be public
or determinable by pubic rules. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">This is not
to deny that there are public rules of language. The analytic
philosophers talk of such public rules is, in effect, a reference
to the spiritual animal. What gives such organisms a “spiritual”
natural is the use of language to coordinate the behavior of its
parts, and that social level behavior guidance system does depend on
representations in the brain that have both a possibly overt verbal
side and a necessarily covert nonverbal side. On the covert nonverbal
side, images in the faculty of imagination are the meanings of words,
and since those images have a geometrically structured relationship
to objects in space by way of the animal system of representation,
words are made to refer to objects by the connections established in
Wernickes area between such images and words as verbal behavior.
Grammatical markers indicating the kind of activity in the faculty of
rational imagination are likewise established in Wernickes area,
as we have seen. In other words, what is called learning the rules of
language is actually just the neurological development of the
reflective brain, during which linguistic behavior schemata evolve by
reinforcement selection to give the subject the capacity to speak and
understand a natural language. It is more basic than rule following.
That is, it would be more accurate to say that learning to use
language is to acquire the capacity to learn to follow public rules,
because rule following, in the sense that is distinctive of human
beings, for example, in playing games, is, as we have seen, something
that requires the language-based ability to see into one anothers
minds (that is, reflective understanding). On our ontological view,
public rules are mutually accepted arguments about how one should
behave in certain situations of the kind that generate institutions
as social level behavior. But none of this is evident to analytic
philosophers, because their approach to philosophy is
epistemological, with a theory about the nature of reason that comes
from reflective understanding. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Analytic
philosophy was doomed, therefore, to suffer the same fate as earlier
forms of epistemological philosophy, because the relationship between
language and the world cannot be explained as a public relationship
in that world. Language and the world is a dualism of much the same
kind that Plato faced between Forms and visible objects and that
Descartes faced between mind and body, because the relationships that
appear to hold between these objects in reflection from the point of
view of the subject makes it impossible to explain adequately how
they are related at all when both sides are taken to be parts of the
same, independently existing world. That is, as I have pointed out
from time to time, the problem of dualism that epistemological
philosophy inevitably causes. Words (and sentences) as linguistic
representations, that is, with meanings and references, are not
public objects, but representations in the brain of each language
user who considers them, and when they are projected onto the natural
world, there is no adequate way to explain how they are even parts of
the same world. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Analytic
philosophy would take various forms, for there are various ways of
explaining the nature of language intersubjectively, and different
ways of using it as a theory about the nature of reason to explain
the validity of the first level arguments of rational culture. But
they are all different from earlier forms of epistemological
philosophy, because using the analysis of public language as a theory
about the nature of reason does not lend itself to any form of
realism. It is not obvious that there are any entities beyond those
that are immediately present to the subject whose existence and
nature could be demonstrated by what is known about language and its
relationship to the world, as the external world was for Descartes
and the Forms were for Plato. The contemporary form of
epistemological philosophy turns out, therefore, to be mostly a
foundation for anti-realism, for there are entities and properties
that it is possible to be skeptical about. The history of analytic
philosophy is, therefore, another story about the discovery of the
failure of another kind of epistemological philosophy. And in this
case, the inability to construct an argument with a higher level of
forensic organization that would explain the validity of the
arguments of rational culture. Let us consider some of the main forms
that analytic philosophy would take. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i>Logical
positivism.</i> The most obvious way to use the new form of
epistemological philosophy is to explain the validity of the
arguments of natural science, for even though they may depend on
mathematics, they are basically arguments of rational level culture,
which use perception and already established beliefs to justify new
beliefs. This higher level argument was undertaken by the logical
positivists as one of the earliest forms analytic philosophy. They
took the most naïve view of language as a public objects, thinking
of words and sentences as having meanings that are public, and that
seemed to afford a way of explaining the validity of scientific
arguments, because both the theories of natural science and the
evidence on which such arguments were based were formulated in
language. Thus, the logical positivists distinguished between
theoretical statements and observational statements. Observational
statements were sentences whose truth could be known by perceiving
the objects and their properties, while theoretical statements were
sentences used to formulate the theories that explained what could be
observed. It seemed natural to assume that theoretical statements had
to be based on observational statements, given traditional empiricism
and its attempt to defend natural science in modern philosophy. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">It was
hoped that analyzing the arguments of natural science in this way
would not only unify the arguments of natural science (the “unity
of science” movement), but also explain why they were true in a way
that would make clear which beliefs are, and which are not,
scientific truths. Moreover, this was a theory about the nature of
reason that promised to settle issues in traditional philosophy, for
any statements about the world (that is, synthetic, as opposed to
analytic statement) that could not be shown to be based on
observational statements would be rejected as metaphysics, that is,
as meaningless propositions. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Thus,
logical positivism used a theory about the nature of language to
claim, in effect, that a basically empiricist analysis of the method
of natural science explained the nature of reason itself. Less
sympathetic critics would dismiss it as “scientism,” because it
rejected all the other arguments of rational culture as invalid. That
was how they explained the validity of practical arguments: value
judgments were cognitively meaningless (though logical positivists
did not deny that they were nonetheless useful to express emotions
and affect behavior by arousing similar feelings in others). But what
brought logical positivism into disfavor among philosophers of
science were its implications about natural science. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Theories
in natural science commonly refer to entities that are not directly
observable, such as electrons, force fields, quarks, and the like in
physics. But since they are not observable, the meanings of such
theoretical terms could not be analyzed in the same naïve way as
observational terms. Only the meanings of observational terms could
be explained by the kind of direct, public relationship that seems to
hold between word and object that was taken for granted. Thus, the
project was to show how theoretical statements are based on
observational statements. But since it turned out that theoretical
statements are not entailed by observational statements, it led to
skepticism about the existence of unobservable theoretical entities. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Since
physicists take it for granted that such theoretical entities exist,
philosophical defenders of natural science were also inclined to be
realists about theoretical entities. Thus, recognizing that they
could not <i>derive </i>theoretical from observational statements,
they might, as “scientific realists,” still be able to articulate
the criterion by which science based them on observational
statements. But to make a long story short, any criterion that would
include the theoretical entities of science would also include
metaphysical entities, unless the criterion was so specific that it
was obviously contrived and ad hoc. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Even if a
criterion for inferring to unobservable entities could be formulated,
however, it was eventually recognized that it would be
question-begging. The mere formulation of criterion would not provide
any reason believing that scientific arguments for the existence of
unobservable entities are valid. What they needed was an explanation
of theoretical arguments that would explain why they are valid. A
criterion for accepting them as scientific would be merely a
principle to be used as a premise in first level arguments of natural
science, where the validity of appealing to such principles is what
is at issue, at least, judging by traditional philosophy.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
validity of arguments that entail the existence of unobservable
theoretical entities cannot be shown by the success of such arguments
in the history of science, because that would be circular. It would
be using the very principle whose validity is at issue to justify its
validity. At best, the history of science can be used to show that
science is moving in a certain direction, perhaps, toward a unique
outcome (as Kitcher 1992 argues). But even that would not show that
what is believed at that ideal end of inquiry is true. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Finally, in
the course of such philosophical disputes, the very distinction
between theoretical and observational statements began to seem
suspect. Since they had abandoned the starting point of modern
philosophy, they could not explain the difference between
observational an theoretical statements as the difference between
ideas of perception and what they represent from the point of view of
the subject (that is, parts of the external world). They had to
define observational statements as what a normal observer could
report from her perception in a given situation. But then it became
clear that what normal observers would report depends heavily on
their beliefs, and well informed observers would report observing
theoretical entities in experimental situations where they were
detected. This led to a form of “holism” about meaning, for as
Quine would argue, what confronts experience is not individual
sentences, but entire theories, worldviews, and even including logic
itself. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Logical
positivists had also expected to explain the validity of arguments in
the science of subjects by showing that they were simply another form
of the same empirical methods. The conclusions of a science of
subjects are typically formulated as psychological sentences, but the
attempt to base them on observational statements led to behaviorism
in psychology (thereby justifying Skinners operant conditioning).
But for those who believe that psychological states are real, it was
another form of anti-realism. For similar reasons, logical
positivists sided with methodological individualists in their battle
with social holists, leading to anti-realism about spiritual animals.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i>Ordinary
language philosophy.</i> There was, however, another way that
analytic philosophy would lead to anti-realism about psychological
states and spiritual animals, because there was another way of
analyzing public language that would account for the use of
psychological sentences. Instead of analyzing the logical structure
of language and explaining how it corresponds to the world, as
logical positivism did, it was possible to analyze the use of
language as a practice governed by public rules that children learn
as they grow up and by which the use of language can be corrected.
This way of using contemporary epistemological philosophy was
introduced by the “latter” Wittgenstein in a development that was
called “ordinary language philosophy.” The various game-like
interactions making up the public phenomenon of language use were
“forms of life,” and as Wittgenstein intended, this theory about
the nature of reason was mainly negative, a critique of how the first
level arguments of the science of subjects are understood even in
rational culture. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Wittgensteins
analysis of ordinary language revealed that language is used for many
reasons, not just describing the world. In particular, he saw the use
of psychological sentences, not as descriptions of psychological
states that are somehow private to each individual, but rather as
sentences with behavioral criteria for attributing psychological
states to others (or, in the case of first person uses, expressing
feelings). They were moves in a game, or part of a form of life that
we share. His goal was to show that the problems of modern philosophy
had been based on illusion, and thus, that its many problems could be
dismissed as mere pseudo-problems. He argued from the nature of
language as governed by public rules that there could not be a
private language, that is, a language whose terms referred to objects
or states that are essentially private, such as ideas in the mind. In
the end, therefore, his ordinary language philosophy led to a form of
behaviorism, which is called “philosophical behaviorism,” in
order to distinguish it from scientific behaviorism, such as
Skinners theory of operant conditioning, which is supported by
logical positivism. Thus, just as logical positivism led to
anti-realism, rather than realism, about theoretical entities, so
both ordinary language philosophy and logical positivism led to
anti-realism, rather than realism, about psychological states. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Ordinary
language philosophy lent itself to explaining the arguments of social
science, as well as those of a science of individual subjects. After
all, it explained language as an interaction among individuals
governed by public rules, and if that was an explanation of the
nature of reason, it showed the validity of our ordinary way of
understanding of institutions and, thus, the reflective science of
the social world, which is an inevitable part of the culture of
rational spiritual animals. See Peter Winch, <i>The Idea of a Social
Science.</i> </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i>Skepticism
about metaphysical realism.</i> Logical positivism led to skepticism
about the existence of theoretical entities, but as we have seen,
logical positivism led to problems that made it possible for
defenders of natural science to continue to accept scientific
realism. But more recently, analytic philosophys theory about the
nature of reason has been found to lead to another kind of
skepticism, this time, about the <i>nature </i>of the entities
described by its theories. Thus, analytic philosophers could concede
that theoretical entities exist and still have grounds for more
subtle skepticism about natural science, for they could doubt
metaphysical realism, rather than scientific realism. (Putnam calls
them “internal realists.”) And these doubts could not be
dismissed so easily.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Their way
of analyzing language also gave analytic philosophers reason to doubt
that natural science, even if it was right about the <i>existence </i>of
theoretical entities, is correct about their real <i>nature</i>. That
is, while the theories of science may not be mistaken by failing to
refer to entities of kinds (unobservable or observable) mentioned by
them, those theories could still be mistaken in the properties
predicated of such entities, including the dispositional properties
(described by laws of nature) that are involved in the
efficient-cause explanations given by natural science. That means
that science might even be mistaken in the causal explanations it
gives of what happens in the world. The kind of realism that would be
denied in this second way is sometime called “metaphysical
realism,” to distinguish it from realism about the existence of the
entities mentioned by scientific theories, or mere “scientific
realism.” Metaphysical realism holds that science discovers not
only the <i>existence</i>, but also the real <i>nature </i>of what
exists in the world. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Skepticism
about metaphysical realism is justified by a certain looseness in the
relationship between language and the world that appears when
language is explained in the way that analytic philosophy does. As
Quine has argued, analytic philosophers cannot admit that words have
meanings that are private to each subject. The meanings of words must
be determined by the references they make as public objects to public
parts of the world. But when the role of the faculties of perception
and imagination in the brain in the semantic relation is ignored,
different relationships between word and object (or language and the
world) seem possible. Two forms of looseness can be distinguished, an
indeterminacy about what words refer to in the world, and an
inability to determine which of different possible properties they
actually have. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Quine
showed the indeterminacy of reference, or ontological indeterminacy,
in a famous series of arguments that showed that there are different
ways of translating a foreign language using as evidence only the
behavior of speakers of the language in certain situations. For
example, he showed that “gavagai” in such a language might refer
to rabbits, rabbit-parts, or time-slices of rabbits, depending on how
other words in the language were translated. That there are always
different possible translation manuals based on such observational
evidence shows that we are unable, in principle, to tell what another
subject is referring to. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Putnam
suggests the universality of this kind of argument by appealing to
the Lowenheim-Skolem theory. It holds, as we have seen (in
<font face="Arial, sans-serif">Relations</font>), that, for any
formal system as complex as set theory or arithmetic, there is an
interpretation of all its sentences that makes them true in the realm
of natural numbers. Thus, Putnam argues that even if a formal system
were constructed that conjoined all the theories of science,
including all the observational statements on which they rest, it
would still not make its own references to the world determinate. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The other
kind of looseness in the relationship between language and the world
is the underdetermination of scientific theories by the evidence for
them. Putnam makes this argument concretely by pointing to the
existence of equivalent theories, or actual theories with different
principles that are equally able to predict all the same phenomena.
He mentions different forms of geometry (one postulating points and
the other spheres shrinking indefinitely), different forms of quantum
mechanics (Heisenberg matrix mechanics and Schroedingers
wavefunction), and different views of the dates and locations of
events by observers on different inertial frames (though he
recognizes that Einsteins special theory of relativity provides a
single description for them all). But the arguments are all typified
by a dispute between Carnap and the Polish logician about how many
objects there are in a universe that contains nothing but x1, x2, and
x3. Carnap would hold that there are three objects, but the Polish
logician would hold that there are seven (or eight, if he counted the
empty set as an object). (See Putnam (1987, p. 18ff; 1988, p. 109ff.)
Putnam argues that there is no principled way of choosing between
such theories and, thus, that there is no truth of the matter about
which is true. (Putnam defends a Kantian view that holds that the
conclusions of natural science are inevitably determined as much by
the nature of the scientists as by the nature of the world they would
describe.)</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Analytic
philosophy supports, therefore, a kind of anti-realism with respect
to metaphysical realism. As long as the relationship between language
and the world is indeterminate or loose in this way, there is reason
to doubt that science discovers the truth about the world, where that
means the way that things really are in themselves. Thus, Putnam can
taunt defenders of science as foolish believers in “The One True
Theory” or a “Gods Eye View of the World.” </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Though
defenders of natural science may not like to think of themselves as
metaphysical realists, neither do they want to accept the “internal
realism” that Putnam would saddle them with, for that is to admit
that natural science, even at the ideal end of inquiry, may not have
described the real nature of what exists. They need a defense against
the more recent skepticism founded in analytic philosophy. But the
obvious way of defending science from its attacks does not work. A
brief account of one more step in the dialectic of contemporary
epistemological philosophy will put us in a position to see why
philosophical culture inevitably evolves from epistemological
philosophy to ontological philosophy.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Since the
analytic philosophys skepticism about metaphysical realism depends
on its way of analyzing language, that is, taking words and sentences
to be public objects whose (meanings and) references are determined
by the public process in which animals use them in a mutually
understood way, defenders of natural science can insist that there is
a deeper, naturalistic explanation of the semantic relation. Though
they do not have such a so-called “causal theory of reference”
worked out in detail, they argue that when it is used to explain the
relationship between language and the world, there will no longer be
any indeterminacy about reference or uncertainty about which of
equivalent theories is true, because science will know what each word
and sentence refers to. This is called the “naturalistic”
approach to language, and disputes currently rage about how to
formulate such a theory.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Such
naturalistic theories about language are vulnerable, however, to a
rebuttal. The vulnerability comes from the way that even scientists
understand the empirical method of natural science (though it can,
perhaps, be traced in part to the alliance between science and
empiricism in modern philosophy). They assume that the goal of
natural science is to discover laws of nature, or more broadly, that
it is the attempt to discover the best efficient-cause explanation of
what happens in the world. That is why the naturalistic explanation
of language is called a “causal” theory of reference. Regardless
how science may explain the semantic relation, it will presumably be
a causal relation of some kind. It will involve a regularity of some
kind that can be described by a law of nature. This leaves defenders
of science vulnerable to Putnams refutation.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Putnam
argues that no such causal theory of reference can possibly eliminate
the looseness that analytic philosophy has found in the relationship
between language and the world because it will itself by subject to
that same looseness. The terms used by a causal theory of reference
will admit of different interpretations, which connect them to
different objects or different properties, and thus, the
indeterminacy about reference will merely be promoted to the level of
the causal theory about language. Thus, the dispute about
metaphysical realism is a standoff. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
argument between analytic philosophy and defenders of natural science
is unresolved, because defenders of natural science do not have an
explanation of the nature of reference that would show that Putnam is
wrong. Nor do they understand natural science in a way that can show
how their theories would escape indeterminacy about their own
references. And though scientific realism is generally taken for
granted, there is still no justification of inferences to the
existence of unobservable entities mentioned by scientific theories.
Ontological philosophy, however, would supply all three. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Ontological
philosophy recognizes that, because of the reflective foundation of
its epistemological argument, analytic philosophys explanation of
the nature of the relationship between language and the world
overlooks the role of the faculties of perception and rational
imagination that are part of the brain of each user of language. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">If
naturalists recognized that brain mechanisms like these mediated the
relationship between word and object (or sentence and state of
affairs), they would see that reference is not a mere <i>causal
relation</i>, but a <i>geometrical isomorphism </i>in space and time
between states and processes in the brain, on the one hand, and
states in the world. The structure of that correspondence between
brain states and the world makes if clear that there is nothing
indeterminate about a semantic relation that is mediated by it. It
would be clear, for example, that “gavagai” refers to whole
rabbits, because the basic structure of the faculty of spatial
imagination represents the spatial relations among such objects. (And
they would see that language is public because it is a mechanism that
coordinates the behavior of individuals in generating social level
behavior by coordinating the activity in their faculties of rational
imagination.) </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Nor is it
plausible for analytic philosophers to argue that this isomorphism is
itself infected by the same indeterminacy, for it involves not only a
spatial isomorphism at each moment, but also a correspondence between
sequences of images <i>over time </i>and the structure of space and
the geometrical structures of objects. It is sequences of images of
the kind that can represent change in the world that represent the
possible against which the actual is seen in a faculty of
imagination. And though that is a correspondence between images in
imagination and the world, it is one that must, by the nature of the
mechanism, correspond to what actually happens when the covert
behavior operating imagination is overt. There can be no
indeterminacy about references mediated by it, once the neurological
mechanisms of imagination are understood.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Even
without its theory about the nature of language, however, ontological
philosophy would enable naturalists to show that scientific theories
in general are not subject to any indeterminacy about reference,
because it gives an ontological explanation of the validity of the
arguments used in natural science (that is, of why efficient-cause
explanations are true) that does not admit any indeterminacy. Instead
of postulating the substances mentioned by scientific theories
(matter, or matter and spacetime), it postulates space and matter,
and by recognizing space itself as an ontological cause of their
validity, ontological philosophy can show the determinacy of
reference, because they all come down to references to particular
objects located in a single three dimensional space. Moreover,
scientific terms referring to properties will be determinate, because
those properties are all explained as aspects of the basic substances
constituting the world and how they exist together. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">We have
already seen (n <font face="Arial, sans-serif">Relations</font>) how
this resolves the problem posed by the Lowenheim-Skolem theorem in
mathematics. It also works for the formal theory that includes all
the theories and observations of science which Putnam uses. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Nor are
there any equivalent theories in science, once the truth of its laws
and efficient-cause explanations are explained ontologically by
spatiomaterialism. We have seen how both Heisenbergs matrix
mechanics and Schroedingers wavefunction can be incomplete
representations of bits of matter that really move continuously
across space as time passes and that interact in determinate ways. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">We have
also see how a spatiomaterialist explanation of the truth of
Einsteins special theory of relativity denies that the dates and
times assigned to events by observers on different inertial are
equally true. One of them is correct and the others false, though it
is not possible to tell which one has the truth. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
different ways of formulating geometry all turn out to be true when
the truth of geometry is explained as a correspondence to the
structure among the parts of space and, thus, among the bits of
matter that coincide with them. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Finally,
even the dispute between Carnap and the Polish logician is resolved
by ontological philosophy, because it turns out that both of them are
mistaken. In a spatiomaterial world with three material objects, x1,
x2 and x3, there would be four objects: space and the three material
objects. (Space can be counted as a single object because its parts
cannot exist without one another.) In holding that there are only
three, Carnap would be overlooking space, and in holding that there
are seven (or eight, if the null class is counted), the Polish
logician would be overlooking how space explains all the sets that
can possibly be formed of material objects in space. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Even
without its explanation of the truth of mathematics and the basic
laws of physics, ontological philosophy makes it possible to justify
scientific realism. There is a real difference between observational
and theoretical statements, because there is a difference between the
objects represented in images of perception and those that are not.
Some objects to which scientific theories refer are too small, too
transient, move too fast, or just not the right kind to be
represented in the animal system of representation (such a force
fields and photons). But spatiomaterialism justifies inferences to
the existence of such unobservable entities, because it explains the
truth of the efficient-cause explanations that mention them.
Efficient causation is just what happens as a result of the motion
and interaction of bits of matter in space as time passes. The
observable evidence is the occurrence of certain kinds of events in
well understood experimental situations (such as the vapor trail in a
Wilson cloud chamber), and given how those events are located in
space at that time, there is no other way they could be caused than
by the existence of the entities postulated. If some other entity
were responsible for what happen, there would be a violation of
either the principle of local motion or the principle of local
action, because it would have to act from outside the experimental
apparatus. Thus, scientific realism has an ontological justification.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">This is not
a justification of the empirical method as such. It cannot be, since
spatiomaterialism is itself the conclusion of an empirical argument,
an inference to the best ontological-cause explanation. But it is
still a justification of inferences to the best efficient-cause
explanations of what happens in the world as a way of discovering
basic laws of physics, because such basic laws are descriptions of
the behavior of the substances that constitute what is being observed
in nature. There is no reason to doubt inductive inferences from
particular cases to general laws, because what is being described in
the particular case are substances of certain kinds that endure
through time and, as substances, they have essential natures that do
not change over time. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><i>Naturalized
epistemology.</i> The response of most defenders of science to
analytic philosophys skepticism about metaphysical realism has
been simply to walk away from such disputes and simply side with
science. This now includes most philosophers of science (according to
Kitcher, 1992, and Rosenberg, 1996). They are naturalists who
recognize that what they are doing is rejecting philosophy, which
they see as the belief that there is a “foundation” or “first
principle” that would make it possible for a second order argument
to so explain the first level arguments of science in a way that
shows their validity. They admit that there is no non-circular way to
defend the method of science against alternative methods of knowing,
such as religion, new age mysticism, dogmatism, poetry, or literary
criticism. For them, it is enough simply to affirm the validity of
the empirical method of science and accept the conclusions that it
draws about the nature of the world. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">This
does not mean that they are not concerned with the method of science.
They do believe that it ought to be clarified and improved. But they
expect to use the conclusions of science itself (discoveries about
instruments, about psychological and social processes, and the like)
to improve the methods of science. What they deny is that there is
any standpoint outside of science from which its method can be judged
or justified. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Those
who describe and defend this attitude toward analytic philosophy
(Kitcher) call themselves “naturalized epistemologists”
(following Quine), because they are giving up philosophy and trying
to give a naturalistic explanation of all cognitive capacities, not
just language.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0; page-break-before: always">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif"><b>T<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="TtsOtkCRS10_13" align="right" hspace="5" width="250" height="40" border="0">he
evolution of ontological philosophy.</b></font> There is, however, an
alternative. That is shown by the argument presented here. Thus,
instead of giving up philosophy and keeping epistemology by doing
naturalized epistemology, it is possible to give up epistemology and
keep philosophy by doing ontological philosophy. That is, instead of
abandoning philosophy, this alternative does philosophy in a new way.
And since it is both possible and functional, the evolution of
ontological philosophy is inevitable.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Philosophy
is a second level argument, that is, an attempt to explain the
validity of first level arguments, or rational culture, from the
foundation of a deeper cause of their validity. But there are
basically two ways of doing this. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The reason
there are two ways of doing philosophy is that rational beings have
two different ways of understanding causes in the world: naturalistic
understanding and reflective understanding. Naturalistic
understanding enables them to explain what happens in nature by
efficient causes, and reflective understanding enables them to
explain how subjects behave by rational causes. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Epistemological
philosophy uses reflective understanding to introduce a theory about
the nature of reason by which they would explain the validity of
arguments of rational level culture. And ontological philosophy uses
naturalistic understanding to introduce a theory about the nature of
substance by which they would explain the validity of arguments of
rational level culture — first, the validity of the efficient-cause
explanations of natural science and, then, by way of its implications
about the inevitable course of evolution, the validity of the
rational-cause explanations of the science of subjects. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">One way of
putting the difference between then is to say that, whereas
epistemological philosophy argues for necessary truths from the
wholeness of reason, ontological philosophy argues for necessary
truths from the wholeness of the world. That is, epistemological
philosophy constructs an argument on a higher level of forensic
organization by offering an explanation of the nature of reason that
shows how all the kinds of first level arguments are valid. That is
to assume that reason has a wholeness that underwrites the validity
of all parts of rational level culture. But ontological philosophy
constructs such a higher level argument by first explaining how two
opposite kinds of basic substances make the world whole. Then, from
that foundation, it explains the nature of reason, and its nature and
place in the natural world explains the validity of all (valid) first
level arguments. But far from explaining the wholeness of reason,
ontological philosophy shows that reason, as it is understood by
reflective understanding, is not whole, because the arguments of
rational culture are divided by at least three basic dichotomies.
Thus, instead of trying to explain the wholeness of reason,
ontological philosophy <i>makes </i>reason whole.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Though
there is another way of doing philosophy, no one is doing it, to
judge from what is being published. One would expect naturalists to
be trying it out, at least. And if they did, it would be selected,
unless these is something seriously wrong with the foregoing, because
that would begin the career of ontological philosophy. That
ontological philosophy would be inevitable because it is both
functional and possible. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Ontological
philosophy is functional, because it would not only enable
naturalists to defend natural science against the skepticism of
analytic philosophy, but as we have seen, it would also do what
philosophy as aspired to do all along — to overcome the dichotomies
of rational culture and explain how all its (valid) first level
arguments are valid. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Moreover,
ontological philosophy is obviously possible, because, as can be seen
from this argument, it is actual. But that does not quite show that
it is possible in the relevant sense, because it does not explain how
it can be tried out as a random variation on the arguments that are
already evolving at the philosophical spiritual stage. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Unless
the defenders of natural science are so committed to naturalized
epistemology that they prefer abandoning philosophy to doing
philosophy in a new way, the reason that ontological philosophy has
not evolved must be that something is has been keeping it from being
tried out. Natural science has now evolved far enough with
mathematics as its tool and capitalism as its sponsor to overcome the
limitations encountered by the Pre-Socratic philosophers of ancient
Greece, but there are two causes that may be conspiring to keep it
from being taken seriously, one having to do with contemporary
naturalism, and the other having to do with contemporary natural
science. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">As
defenders of natural science, naturalists assume that whatever can be
known about the substances constituting the world must be discovered
using the empirical method of natural science. They are scientific
realists in the sense that they believe in the existence of the
entities (observable and unobservable) mentioned by natural science.
By the same token, however, they are skeptics about the existence of
anything whose existence does not have to be posited in order to
accept the conclusions of natural science as true. Thus, they let the
conclusions of science determine their ontology. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Parsimony
is a basic tenet of the empirical method of natural science. In
making inferences to the best efficient-cause explanations of the
natural world, science assumes that the best explanation is the
simplest and most complete, and thus, if two theories have the same
scope, it must prefer the one that that postulates the fewest and
simplest causes. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Contemporary
naturalists are skeptical to the point of being contemptuous of any
claims about the existence of something not recognized by natural
science. Natural scientists have long allied themselves with
empiricism, because empiricism seemed to be the vaccine that would
protect science from the embarrassingly implausible metaphysical
systems of traditional philosophy.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">That does
not mean that naturalists reject ontology. They recognize that it is
necessary to postulate substances as self-subsistent entities in
order to explain the natural world as something whose existence does
not depend on the individual rational subjects who know about it. But
as defenders of natural science, they believe that the only
substances they have to postulate are those that are entailed by the
truth of the theories of natural science. Naturalists believe,
therefore, that they are already doing everything that can be done
with ontology as a way of explaining the truth of scientific
theories. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Or to put
it negatively, naturalists do not believe that ontology can <i>explain
</i>the validity of the arguments of natural science, because
ontology depends on those very arguments for its beliefs about which
substances exist. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Natural
science is, however, overlooking one of the two, opposite substances
that constitute the world — or else it affirms the existence of a
kind of substance along with matter that makes ontology a problem,
rather than an explanation. It denies the existence of space as a
substance enduring through time, because that would mean that space
is absolute, and that is what contemporary physics rejected in
accepting the Einsteinian revolution. Instead, contemporary physics
affirms the existence of spacetime, if it affirms the existence of
any substances at all in addition to matter (that is, in addition to
particles and fields). Though Einstein admitted that his discovery of
his special theory of relativity was inspired by empiricism
(especially Mach), empiricist skepticism was not necessary for its
acceptance. Spatiomaterialism would be excluded anyway by the
empirical method of science, especially the form it takes in physics
because of the importance of mathematics, and there are two steps to
the banishment of substantival space from contemporary physics, one
having to do with Einsteins special theory of relativity, and the
other having to do with his general theory of relativity. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">When
Einsteins special theory of relativity was first accepted, there
were, as we have seen, two theories that could explain all the
phenomena covered by it: a theory of the kind proposed by Lorentz as
well as Einsteins theory. But the empirical method of science is
to infer to the best efficient-cause explanation of what is
observable in nature, and in the case of physics, where mathematics
had long since become an indispensable tool, that meant making
quantitatively precise predictions of measurements. Thus, when
confronted with two highly mathematical theories covering the same
phenomena, physicists had to prefer the simpler theory, and that was
clearly Einsteins theory. Einstein needed only two assumptions
about the empirical equivalence of all inertial frames in order to
derive mathematically descriptions of all the reluctant phenomena
(namely, the principle of relativity and the constant value of the
velocity of light in all inertial frames). </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Minkowski
recognized that all the measurements made by all inertial observers
could be explained by postulating spacetime, instead of space as a
substance enduing through time (that is, absolute space), and thus,
when Einstein used the notion of spacetime to explain the nature of
gravity, its status as a self-subsistent entity mentioned by the
basic laws of physics could hardly be denied. Spacetime had to be a
substance for its curvature to be the cause of gravitational
acceleration.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">This
seems to leave naturalists who would consider ontological
explanations of the world with a choice between a form of materialism
that reduces space to the spatial relations of bits of matter (or to
particles and fields, denying the vacuum like a contemporary plenum
theory), and a form of spacetime substantivalism (or
“spatiotemporalism,” as I called it in <font face="Arial, sans-serif">Spatiomaterialism</font>)
that reduces bits of matter to timelines in spacetime and implicitly
denies that there is any unique moment in their careers that is
present. In either case, ontology is not able to <i>explain </i>the
validity of the efficient-cause explanations of natural science. The
former, spatial relationism, affirms only the existence of what
natural science already mentions, and thus, as scientific realism
already postulates the substances needed to explain its theories. And
the ontological explanations built into science would cease to be
explanatory, if spatiotemporalism were taken seriously as the
ontology of physics, because it denies that any substance endures
through time. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Indeed, it
is hard to see how spacetime would be used as an ontological cause to
<i>explain </i>anything that exists in the natural world, since one
of the deepest puzzles confronting contemporary physics is
understanding how quantum mechanics, its theory of matter, is even
related to Einsteins general theory of relativity. Current
attempts to find a single law of nature that would entail both
theories lead to the belief that there are eleven or more dimensions
to space! </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Naturalists
understandably make little use of spacetime in their attempts to
understand why the arguments of natural science are valid. And it is
easy for contemporary naturalists to settle for the believe in a
materialism that affirms nothing but particles and fields, because
the view that nature is constituted by a single kind of substance
goes back to the beginning of modern science, before Newton. It was
defended not only by Hobbes, the most famous materialist of the
modern era, but also by Cartesians, for they believed in “extension,”
or a plenum of substances whose only essential nature was geometrical
structure. Though mind-body dualism was an untenable ontology, the
belief that body itself consisted of two opposite kinds of substances
would make it even more inelegant. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">It
is, therefore, possible to explain why naturalists do not take
ontological philosophy seriously. Indeed, it is an inevitable result
of the empirical method used in physics and the deference that
philosophers of science pay to physicists. Though mathematics was an
offspring of epistemological philosophy (along with its main sponsor,
capitalism), the patent failure of traditional philosophy to provide
the deeper justification of natural science (and other arguments of
rational level culture) makes the decision of defenders of science to
abandon philosophy understandable. But in choosing to naturalize
epistemology, they are divorcing themselves from traditional
philosophy. And they getting a worse settlement than is possible,
because philosophy has a secret treasure stored in its early history,
before it started down the road of epistemology. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
Pre-Socratic philosophers had another idea about how to do
philosophy. They saw the possibility of an explanation of the
wholeness of the world, before philosophy came to be seen as seeking
just an explanation of the wholeness of reason. The Pre-Socratics saw
how the basic nature of what exists in the world, including its
categorical features, could be explained by identifying the basic
substances that constitute it. Not only did they discover the concept
of substance needed for ontology to be explanatory, but they
discovered the best ontological explanation of the natural world as
well. However, their ontological explanation of the world could not
be convincing, as we have seen, without an adequate theory of the
detailed nature of the “atoms” contained by the void, for that is
needed to trace the course of evolution, distinguish the various
levels of biological and neurological organization, and thereby
explain the nature of reason. When philosophers turned to
epistemology, the discoveries of pre-Socratic philosophy were
forgotten. Though the tool and sponsor needed to discover that
detailed explanation were provided by the easier road to philosophy
taken by epistemologists, the desperate flight from its failure now
threatens to deprive naturalists of what they need to defend natural
science. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">If,
however, the decision of naturalists to take their stand with natural
science and stop with scientific realism is caused by the factors
mentioned above, then it is possible for ontological philosophy based
on spatiomaterialism to be tried out at this point in the evolution
of philosophical culture by a random variation on existing arguments.
All that is needed is a rediscovery of pre-Socratic philosophy. That
would be to take the opposite course from naturalized epistemology.
Though it would abandon epistemology, it would be to do philosophy in
a new way. But that would give naturalists an ontology that would
explain the validity of the arguments of natural science in a way
that makes it possible not only to justify the empirical method of
science, but also to criticize it. That is, they would have reason to
doubt that it is sufficient to infer to the best efficient-cause
explanation of what is observed to happen in nature, for they would
see that it is possible to infer to the best ontological-cause
explanation of what exists in nature as well. This would lead them to
consider in a fresh way the possibility of spatiomaterialism, for it
is obviously the best ontological explanation of the categorical
features of the natural world, including the fact that material
objects have spatial relations, that they can change, and that they
can change only by motion, not to mention mathematics and the
principles of local motion and local action. And that could lead them
to acknowledge that spatiomaterialism can explain the truth of both
of Einsteins theory.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Such
philosophers of science would then recognize that physicists made a
mistake when they rejected Lorentzs Newtonian explanation in favor
of Einsteins relativistic explanation. They would see that, even
though physicists were merely following their empirical method, what
physicists gave up for mathematical simplicity was not just the
intuitive intelligibility of theories in physics, as if that were a
mere subjective bias. What they gave up was a better ontological
explanation of the natural phenomena, that is, as we have seen, one
that explains more of what is observed in nature with less in the way
of substances. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Furthermore,
they would recognize that it is possible for spatiomaterialism to
explain the truth of Einsteins general theory of relativity, even
though it entails the existence of absolute space. And in the
process, they would finally understand how the quantum theory of the
other three basic forces of nature are related to gravitation. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">If
naturalists did that, they would quickly recognize the other
consequences that follow from spatiomaterialism, all the necessary
truths of ontological philosophy, including the global regularities,
the course of evolution, and how it leads up to the discovery of what
is represented in the diagram of the wholeness of the world. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Ontological
philosophy is, therefore, inevitable. It is possible for such a
random variation to be tried out at this point in the evolution of
philosophical spiritual animals, and thus, since it is functional, it
follows that ontological philosophy based on spatiomaterialism will
evolve. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Ontological
philosophy will be rationally selected, once it is understood,
because as an explanation of the wholeness of the world, it has all
possible objections completely surrounded. All the issues currently
being disputed in intellectual culture can be located within the
structure of its argument, that is, within the diagram of the whole,
and ontological philosophy shows how they can all be resolved. When
that is recognized, the only issue will be whether ontological
philosophy is true, for all those objections to it will stand or fall
together. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
evolution of ontological philosophy does not, of course, depend on
tWoW.net. It would eventually evolve even if there were no such
website, because it is a possible random variation on the arguments
that have been accumulated as Western culture and, in spiritual
animals that are as populous, healthy and powerful as those that
exist today, there are enough rational subjects with the love of
argument and the respect for rational judgment to try it out. That
much is ontologically necessary — and it will happen in the near
future, barring some unforeseen catastrophe that derails evolution at
this point, like the impact of another giant asteroid like the one
that doomed the dinosaurs. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">On the
other hand, tWoW.net will not fail to convince rational subjects,
even if there are mistakes in the details of some of its arguments,
because if it is on the right track, that will be obvious and
mistakes can be corrected without upsetting the project as a whole.
Thus, it is reasonable to expect tWoW.net to be the random variation
whose rational selection will be responsible for the evolution of
ontological philosophy — though such a contingent detail cannot be
ontologically necessary. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
diagram of the wholeness of the world is, therefore, included in the
diagram of the wholeness of the world. Ontological philosophy based
on spatiomaterialism is itself something that inevitably evolves in
the kind of world that it describes, because the sort of evolutionary
change that it entails, given the specific nature of space and matter
in our spatiomaterial world, includes the evolution of reason and
reason evolves toward the natural perfection of understanding how the
world is whole. Thus, reason comes to understand itself as an
inevitable product of evolution by reproductive causation.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
rational selection of ontological philosophy is, however, just the
beginning of its career. The discovery of an argument that explains
the validity of all the arguments of rational level culture will make
it possible to sort out which arguments are valid and which are not
in every area of inquiry, and that will make it possible to discover
what is true much more quickly and reliably than currently seems
possible. Many of those discoveries are predictable, including those
that have been mentioned in this argument to show the possibility of
an ontological approach to philosophy. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
discovery of the true is, however, only part of the significance of
ontological philosophy. Reason is not just a cognitive machine. It is
an animal behavior guidance system, which uses its knowledge of the
true to guide behavior. And reason is the most powerful cause in the
world, because it guides the behavior of spiritual animals as well as
individual rational subjects. What it does will determine the future
course of evolution. Not only will reason take control of biological
evolution, with rational selection constraining where natural
selection works, but reason will create the other forms of natural
perfection that comes to exist during the career of ontological
philosophy. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
wholeness of the world is not, therefore, just the wholeness of space
or how all the aspects of the world are constituted by two basic
substances. Nor is its wholeness that those aspects entail an
evolutionary change in which the wholeness of the world comes to be
understood by rational subjects. Reason is a part of the world, and
thus, it has a role to play in the world. As rational subjects
recognize reason as the inevitable product of biological evolution,
they will recognize that they are responsible for the future of
evolution in their planetary system. What reason will do is not
something that reason knows by predicting what it will do. It is
something that is known by discovering what reason <i>ought </i>to
do. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Some of
what reason will do is, of course, predictable. Rational beings will
continue to pursue most of the same goals they currently pursue,
because those goals are good. And they will use their new
understanding of what is true to figure out how to solve all the
social, economic and political problems that now seem intractable.
These goals are predictable, because they are goals that reason
already has.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">However,
not all of the goals pursued by rational beings are predictable even
in this way, because some goals of reason are optional. Some goals
are good for reason to pursue because they are chosen by reason. And
since not only individual rational subjects, but also spiritual
animals can have optional goals, there are aspects of the future of
evolution that cannot be predicted even in principle. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Finally, as
we shall see, there is one kind of goal that reason can have only
because practical reason recognizes, as ontological philosophy
evolves in philosophical level culture, something that is so
absolutely perfect that it is worthy of worship. Though that is
necessarily true, if it is true at all, it is a necessary truth that
can be discovered only by practical reasoning. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">At
this point, therefore, the argument of ontological philosophy must
switch from theoretical reason to practical reasons, that is, from
arguments about what is to arguments about what ought to be. Knowing
the true is only half the way that reason makes the world whole. The
other half is how it does what is good. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Ontological
philosophy reveals, therefore, that reason is far more important to
the world than it supposed, when it assumed that a theory about the
nature of reason based on reflection would explain the validity of
the arguments of rational level culture. Instead of assuming that
reason is whole, ontological philosophy explained how the world
itself is whole. That revealed that reason is not whole, but divided
by inherent dichotomies. But understanding why rational culture is
limited makes reason whole, and as reason recognizes its place in the
world, it accepts responsibility for continuing evolutionary progress
and making the world itself whole. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0; page-break-before: always">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif"><b>E<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="OdkC27" align="right" width="100" height="39" border="0">pistemological
philosophy of causation.</b></font> This ontological explanation of
change has implications about the nature of efficient causation that
solves various problems that have arisen in epistemological
philosophy of science, and following them out here may help clarify
the significance of ontological philosophy. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">More
central issues in epistemological philosophy of science, about
realism, which arise from its attempt to show the validity of natural
science, have already been discussed in describing contemporary
philosophy, the last era in the history of epistemological
philosophy. We have seen in discussing the philosophical spiritual
stage how ontological philosophy would join the issue about
scientific realism and metaphysical realism and defend the truth of
the conclusions of the empirical method of natural science.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
problems about causation in epistemological philosophy of science
fall into two main categories. One arises in natural science about
the nature of efficient causation, and the other arises in social
science about the nature of rational causation (and, thus, about the
basic nature of human society as such). </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
difference between natural and social science arises, as we have seen
(in <font face="Verdana, sans-serif">Stage 9</font>), from the
difference between naturalistic and subjectivistic understanding. It
illustrates one of the dichotomies of rational culture that
epistemological philosophy has not adequately overcome, and though we
already know how it is over come, it may be useful to see how it
works out in the context of current discussions in philosophy of
science. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif"><b>E<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="OdkC28" align="right" width="72" height="32" border="0">fficient
causation.</b></font> Efficient-cause explanations show that the
events and conditions identified as causes produce the events and
conditions identified as their consequences. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Efficient
causes are different from ontological causes, because efficient
causes precede their effects in time (though when both are static
conditions, the temporal priority may not be obvious). Ontological
causes are simultaneous with their effect, because they produce their
effect by constituting them. That is, the existence of ontological
effects is part of what already exists in the ontological causes. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Ontological
cause explanations are, therefore, self contained and do not call for
any deeper explanation. Ontological causes are substances, which are
self-subsistent, and the connection between them and their effects is
a kind of identity. Ontological effects are identical to parts or
aspects of their ontological causes. Seeing the connection between
ontological cause and effect is, therefore, just a matter of
recognizing that the substances involved have a certain aspect, and
as we have seen, the power of rational beings to single out aspects
of the natural world is explained by the nature of rational
imagination. (Rational imagination includes spatial and structural
imagination as well as naturalistic and reflective imagination --
that is, imagination that depends on natural and psychological
sentences, respectively). </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Efficient-cause
explanations, on the other hand, require further support, because the
efficient causes and their effects are distinct events or states (or
even less general regularities, in the case of reductive
efficient-cause explanations). The connections cited in empirical
science are laws of nature, which are descriptions of regularities
about change that are observed in nature. Though epistemological
philosophy of science does not recognize anything more basic than
laws of nature, it has recognized, ever since Hume, that something
more seems to be required. Efficient-cause explanations call for a
deeper explanation. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">By
efficient-cause explanations, I mean explanations that conform to the
&quot;covering law model&quot; of explanation. As represented in the
so-called deductive-nomological model, each such explanation is a
deductive argument in which the conclusion describes what is
explained (a particular event or condition or else a regularity that
holds under certain conditions). The premises are of two kinds, laws
of nature and descriptions of relevant initial and/or boundary
conditions. The explanation depends on deducing a description of what
is being explained from the premises, that is, showing them to be
instances of the relevant laws of nature. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Something
about the nature of efficient causes can be inferred from the
standard for judging the best explanation, which is part of the
empirical method itself. As we saw in <font face="Verdana, sans-serif">Method</font>,
that standard is explaining the most with the least. Applying it to
the case of efficient-cause explanations, the best explanations of
any given phenomenon is the one that uses the fewest and simplest
laws of nature, for that means it uses the fewest and simplest
causes. But science aspires to explain all natural phenomena, and
thus, more generally, the best explanation is not merely the
simplest, but also the one with the largest scope. (There can be
tradeoffs between simplicity and scope that make it difficult to tell
which explanation is best, though in practice, such conflicts tend to
be resolved by further discoveries.) In general, therefore, the goal
of science is to discover the fewest, simplest and most general laws
of nature that are able to explain all the particular events and
conditions (and less general laws) by their efficient causes.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
covering law model is not a very satisfactory explanation of the
nature of efficient causes, because it comes down to the nature of
laws of nature, and that is no less problematic than the nature of
efficient causes. The problem is not solved by discovering the most
basic laws of nature (the basic laws of ideal physics), because even
at the bottom, there is no explanation of why there is a connection
between efficient causes and their effect. There is only the
description of a regularity.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">In
less general branches of natural science, there is nevertheless hope
of explaining how efficient causes produce their effects, for it
seems possible to reduce them to explanations in more basic branches
of science and ultimately to the laws of physics. But this
expectation is not satisfied for two reasons. First, the laws and
explanations given in physics do not reveal the nature of the casual
connection in the most basic efficient causes. And second, many of
the laws and explanations of less general branches of science cannot
be reduced to those of physics. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">As we shall
see, the second problem comes down to the first, because the
irreducibility of the laws, properties and efficient causes cited in
the less general branches of science to physics is a result of the
lack of any deeper explanation of the truth of the basic laws of
physics. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">But first,
let us consider the basic laws and explanations of empirical physics
and how they are explained ontologically. That will enable us to see
how the apparently irreducible laws, properties and efficient-cause
explanations of less general branches of natural science can be
reduced to ontology, albeit not to the laws of physics. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif"><b>B<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="OdkC29" align="right" width="45" height="30" border="0">asic
laws.</b></font> The most basic laws of nature are the basic laws of
physics. They describe relationships between basic quantitative
properties that require mathematics to be stated exactly and
completely, and what they predict are usually precise measurements
that are otherwise unpredictable. Considering their vulnerability to
refutation by observation, the success of physics in discovering such
laws make it undeniable that physics is on to something real about
the world. And the search for the holy grail in physics has been for
many decades now the attempt to find a single, most basic law that
would include all four of the basic forces of nature (not only
electromagnetism, the strong force, and the weak force, but also
gravitation). </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">But
as we have seen, its conception of the holy grail shows the
limitation of the empirical method of physics. Physics infers to the
best efficient-cause explanation of what is observed in nature and
uses that to determine its ontology instead of inferring to the best
ontological-cause (and best efficient-cause) explanation. It
discovers basic laws and affirms the existence of what those laws
must refer to, instead of trying at the same time to explain the
basic features of the natural world (why bits of matter have spatial
relations and how change is possible). But even if there were a
single law from which all the other could be derived — and we have
seen why that is not possible in our ontological explanation of the
truth of Einsteins general theory of relativity — it would not
reveal the nature of the efficient causes. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Ever
since Hume, it has been recognized that even though physical laws
describe causal connections, there is a problem about what such laws
correspond to. As Hume argued, the most that science can know about
the causal connections described by its laws of nature is just that
certain regularities hold in nature. That does not reveal the nature
of the power or necessity by which causes produce their effects. Hume
recognized that the problem about causation is not solved by
explaining regularities about observable processes by appealing to
physical laws describing how their more elementary parts behave,
because that merely shifts the problem to the basic laws of physics.
Hume was a skeptic who took this difficulty to its extreme, arguing
that since all we really know is that certain regularities have so
far been observed to hold in nature, we are not even rationally
entitled to predict that the same will be true in the future. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Skepticism
is not, however, what leads us to expect that, if science were to
know the truth about efficient causes, it would be able to explain
<i>how </i>efficient causes produce their effects. It is rather that,
since laws are just descriptions of regularities, there must be
something that makes the regularities true. That is what is offered
by an ontological explanation of the basic laws of physics. Even the
ontology of generic spatiomaterialism is able to explain some aspects
of the regularities described by laws of physics and show them to be
ontologically necessary. Consider how the ontologically necessary
principle of local motion contradicts Humes view that we can never
know the necessity of any regularity, but only the constant
conjunction itself.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote1anc" href="#sdendnote1sym"><sup>i</sup></a></sup>
</font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">When one
billiard ball hits another, it causes the second ball to start
moving. Apart from such events being constantly conjoined in
experience, he argued, we could not know anything about what would
happen. To an extent, Hume is correct, for experience does tell us
that the first ball will not just stop when it reaches the second
ball, that it will not bounce back nor go around the second ball and
proceed on its way. But Hume is wrong to hold that we can have no
knowledge of what is necessary. For if we are spatiomaterialists, we
know that the first billiard ball cannot simply disappear from the
front side of the second billiard ball at one moment and then simply
reappear on the other side at the next moment. The principle of
motion does not tell us precisely what will happen, but it does limit
the possibilities. But neither does it depend merely on the
experience of that constant conjunction. Its necessity depends on our
reasons for believing that spatiomaterialism is the best way of
explaining the natural world by substances existing in time.
Inferring to a deeper kind of explanation of nature than science
gives us a foundation for showing the necessity of at least certain
aspects of the constant conjunctions that science discovers by
inferring to the best efficient-cause explanations.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
principle of local action is also ontologically necessary, and it can
also tell us something about the billiard ball that is prior to the
experiences of what happens to them that Hume is talking about.
Experience of constant conjunctions of events in the past may be the
only way of predicting precisely what will happen, but we do know
prior to experience that the first ball will not change the motion of
the second ball without either contacting it or exerting a force or
modifying space in a way that reaches out across space as time passes
to affect it. Thus, spatiomaterialism shows that another aspect of
the regularities that science knows only from experience of constant
conjunctions is ontologically necessary. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">What
these examples are pointing to, however, is a deeper, ontological
explanation of all the aspects of the regularities described by the
basic laws of physics. The ontological explanation of the connection
between efficient cause and effect comes from showing how the causes
and effects are constituted by substances enduring through time.
Efficient causes and effects are just aspects of those substances
(that is, states of affairs or events constituted by them), and since
the natures of the substances and how they exist together as a world
constrains what can happen to them, there are certain ontologically
necessary truths about how change can and cannot take place. Thus,
when space and matter are assumed to have more detailed essential
natures, further aspects of the regularities about change are also
explained ontologically. That is how the truth of the basic laws of
physics were explained ontologically in discussing contingent laws
(<font face="Verdana, sans-serif">Local regularities)</font>. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Such an
ontological explanation of the truth of the basic laws of physics
does not, of course, show that they are among the necessary truths
proved by ontological philosophy. They do not follow from
spatiomaterialism by itself. Instead, the theories about the nature
of space and matter that were proposed are, rather, inferences to the
best ontological explanation of the basic laws of physics, given the
truth of spatiomaterialism. Their role in this argument was to show
that it is possible, despite appearances to the contrary from
contemporary physics, that the natural world is constituted by space
and matter enduring though time as substances. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">But even
though the basic laws of physics are not ontologically necessary
truths, the ontological explanation of why they are true within the
constraints of spatiomaterialism is an ontological explanation of the
connection between the efficient causes and their effect mentioned in
the explanations of physics. It explains the &quot;necessity&quot; of
the connection between cause and effect, or the &quot;power&quot; by
which the efficient cause produces its effect.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">There
is, therefore, a way of explaining ontologically the connections
between efficient causes and their effects, and as we shall see, the
reason that regularities discovered by the less general branches of
science are not reducible to physics is its failure to take the role
of space as an ontological cause into account.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif"><b>I<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="OdkC30" align="right" width="67" height="30" border="0">rreducible
regularities.</b></font> Even when it was assumed that there is no
solution to the problem about the nature of efficient causation in
physics, it seemed that efficient-cause connections in less general
branches of natural science could be solved by reducing their
efficient-cause explanations to efficient-cause explanations in
physics. Though that would not solve the basic problem, it would
locate all the problems in physics, and the other branches of science
could hope to explain the regularities they discovered by those
discovered by physics. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">On
the deductive-nomological model of explanation, such reductive
explanations would involve deducing the laws of less general branches
of natural science from the basic laws of physics together with
relevant initial and boundary conditions. Regularities would be
explained in the same way as events or states of affairs, because
they would be shown to depend on certain deeper initial and boundary
conditions as their efficient causes. This was a project proposed by
logical positivists to show what they called “the unity of
science.” </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Attempts
have been made to reduce the theories discovered by less general
branches of science, from chemistry and biology to physiology and
psychology, to physics. But this project encountered various
obstacles. They all involve the discovery of what seem to be
irreducible laws of nature.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">To be sure,
it is often assumed that properties, such as functional properties,
can be irreducible in the sense of being supervenient without holding
that there are any irreducible laws. But as we shall see,
supervenient properties presuppose irreducible laws. It is just that
those laws are not the kind that support efficient cause
explanations. The regularities they describe have to do with constant
conjunctions that are explicitly assumed not to be causal. But they
are nonetheless irreducible in the sense of not being explainable by
physics, except as accidents. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">We
will consider the obstacles to reductionism in natural science in
three classes, those having to do with thermodynamics, those having
to do with mechanical principles, and those having to do with
evolution. These problems correspond to three kinds of global
regularities, material, structural and reproductive, respectively.
Thus, it should not be surprising that what makes it possible to
overcome the irreducibility to physics is the recognition of the role
that the wholeness of space plays as an ontological cause, for that
is what made it possible to explain the global regularities
ontologically. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">This does
not, of course, show that these less general laws of nature are
reducible to physics. They still cannot be deduced from the laws of
physics and initial and boundary conditions, at least, not in a way
that anyone takes to explain the regularity. But it does show that
they are <i>ontologically </i>reducible in a spatiomaterial world
like ours. That is, they could be explained by an “ontological
natural science,” or a natural science in which empirical ontology
was recognized to be a more basic branch of natural science than
physics, because physics would then formulate its efficient-cause
explanations on the assumption that space is a substance enduring
through time. In other words, the solution to the puzzles posed by
the apparent irreducibility of less general laws of nature does not
depend on any of the theories about the more specific natures of
space and matter required to explain the truth of the basic laws of
physics. What is crucial is only the recognition that space is a
substance, because when it is seen as one of the substances
constituting the regularity, its nature can be seen as constraining
what happens in the world, that is, as an ontological cause. What
seems to be irreducible regularities are, in fact, ontological
effects, specifically, global regularities.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
advantage of this ontological reduction of physically irreducible
regularities is that it takes the steam out of the engine that is
currently pulling epistemological philosophy of science toward the
acceptance of emergentism, or laws that deny that physics offer a
complete efficient-cause explanation of what happens in the world. It
shows that the irreducibility of laws to physics is not a reason to
suppose that there are other kinds of efficient causes at work in
nature. What I mean by this tendency are illustrated by the following
examples. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif">Self-organizing
systems.</font> There are thermodynamicists, such as Prigogine
(1980), who see the phenomena described by the second law of
thermodynamics as evidence of &quot;self-organizing&quot; systems.
The systems that are supposed to organize themselves are made of
matter, but if matter is doing anything more than obeying the laws of
motion and the laws about the attractive and repulsive forces that
are recognized by physics, it is hard to avoid the suggestion that it
is a holistic kind of matter exerting an emergent force of order in
some way.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote2anc" href="#sdendnote2sym"><sup>ii</sup></a></sup></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif">Stratification
of nature.</font> Emergentism is more explicit in the belief that
nature itself is &quot;stratified&quot; according to branches of
science, so that the laws discovered in chemistry, biology,
physiology, psychology, and social science are each as basic as any
discovered by physics.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote3anc" href="#sdendnote3sym"><sup>iii</sup></a></sup>
This would mean that every branch of science discovers not only
properties, but also laws of nature, that are emergent with respect
physics, because to accept the stratification of nature is to assume
that there is something <i>sui generis</i> about the laws of each
higher branch of science that makes them irreducible to lower level
laws (and relevant initial and boundary conditions), or at least not
reducible to laws of physics and physical conditions.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif">Emergent
evolutionism.</font> The defense of emergentism has a long history.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote4anc" href="#sdendnote4sym"><sup>iv</sup></a></sup>
A view called &quot;emergent evolutionism&quot; was defended, for
example, by philosophers like C. Lloyd Morgan (1920) and Samuel
Alexander (1920). They postulated a kind of matter whose essential
nature included emergent powers that were supposed to account for the
<i>order </i>that exists in nature, including the &quot;new forms of
relatedness&quot; that show up in the course of evolution over time
at several levels of complexity. Their emergentism is not all that
different from &quot;process philosophy,&quot; which began with
Alfred North Whitehead (1927, 1929) and has been taken up by Charles
Hartshorn (1970), Errol Harris (1965), and others. Although they deny
that nature is stratified, they assume that what accounts for the
apparent truth of the laws of physics as well as the order in nature
is a subjective nature that is found in even the simplest
particulars.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="2" style="font-size: 10pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif">Chaos
theory.</font> Emergentism seems to be what is being suggested by
defenders of the recently popular &quot;chaos theory.&quot; They
point to the way in which random motion and interaction sometimes
seems to break out into order to suggest that there is some
heretofore unrecognized emergent aspect of matter.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote5anc" href="#sdendnote5sym"><sup>v</sup></a></sup>
But instead of defending emergentism explicitly, they are content to
present these phenomena in the vein of a mystery yet to be solved.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0; page-break-before: always">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font color="#993366"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif"><b>S<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="OdkC31" align="right" width="62" height="34" border="0">econd
law of thermodynamics.</b></font></font> The second law of
thermo-dynamics may not seem like an issue in the nature of efficient
causation. Its main philosophical implications are usually portrayed
as the discovery of the inevitability of the so-called “heat death”
of the universe. But since it is a global regularity about change, it
does describe states of affairs that are temporally related, like
efficient cause and effect, and having seen how it is related to the
other global regularities, we can see that it involved in every
connection between efficient causes and their effects. Dispositions,
such as the shattering of a fragile object, which are the paradigm
case of efficient causation, are irreversible structural global
regularities, and structural causes doing work are the stuff of which
reproductive cycles and their ontological effects are made. To start
with the second law of thermodynamic is, therefore, to go the heart
of the problem with apparently irreducible laws.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
received explanation of thermo&shy;dynamics, statistical mechanics,
is often cited as a successful reduction of a theory to physics, but
it is not completely successful in reducing these laws to the basic
laws of physics. It is undoubtedly correct in taking heat energy to
be the kinetic energy of the constituent molecules on the micro
level, but statistical mechanics is not a reduction of the second law
of thermo&shy;dynamics to the basic laws of physics, because they do
not entail that law. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
problem with the materialist reduction of the simplest case of
entropy increase can be suggested by a very abstract puzzle about the
direction of change in time. The second law of thermo&shy;dynamics
describes a regularity about change that is <i>a</i>symmetrical in
time. But all the more basic laws of physics to which it would be
reduced are temporally symmetrical. That is, the basic laws of
physics can tell us, given the state of a system, how it will unfold
over time. But those laws are just as valid for another system, just
like the first, except that the objects (and photons) all have
exactly opposite momentums. And they imply that the second system
will unfold as if time were reversed in the first system. Thus, the
basic laws of physics are symmetrical in time. But the second law of
thermo&shy;dynamics is not. It denies that time could be reversed.
Entropy cannot decrease over time in an isolated system; it can only
increase. The problem is how a time-<i>a</i>symmetrical law can be
derived from time-symmetrical laws. This is sometimes called the
puzzle about the “arrow of time.”<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote6anc" href="#sdendnote6sym"><sup>vi</sup></a></sup>
It is, as we shall see, the source of Loschmidts paradox.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
time-asymmetry of the tendency to randomness has an obvious
explanation, according to spatio-materialism, because it is a regular
change about the geometrical structures that holds of whole regions
of dynamic processes over time. It is plausibly explained by space as
an ontological cause, because both tendencies responsible for it are
global change in the direction of a geometrical structure that
resembles that of space itself. Potential energy becomes kinetic
energy which becomes evenly distributed heat. It is the second
tendency, the way in which kinetic energy is randomized, that is at
issue in the reduction of the second law. What makes the tendency to
randomness seem mysterious is overlooking the role of space itself. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Science
does not recognize the existence of any substances not entailed by
its efficient-cause explanations, and as we have seen, than means
that space itself is not taken as a cause in explaining any
phenomenon. Instead, physics gets by affirming only the truth of
highly mathematical laws of nature and using them to predict
quantitatively precise measurements. Though in this case, the
mathematics is statistics, it still abstracts from the nature of
space. Statistical mechanics is the attempt at a materialist
reduction, rather than a spatiomaterialist reduction, and its
inadequacy is shown by a paradox described by Loschmidt. The
advantage of explaining the tendency to randomness to
spatio-materialism can, therefore, be seen in how it removes that
paradox. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">It
was Boltzmann who first showed that random states of closed or
isolated systems of material objects could be analyzed statistically.
He defined randomness for a gas contained in a box as a <i>statistical
equilibrium </i>about the positions and momentums of its constituent
molecules. Although the microstate of a gas depends on the positions
and momentums of all its molecules, many different microstates are
indistinguishable from a macroscopic standpoint, and Boltzmanns
idea was to measure the probabilities of different kinds of
macrostates by the number of different microstates that could realize
them. This makes sense statistically, if the possible microstates of
a gas are all equally probable. But that requires a way of measuring
how many different kinds of microstates would realize each kind of
macrostate, and so Boltzmann introduced the notion of a <i>six
dimensional phase space </i>to represent the state of <i>each
</i>molecule in the gas. Three dimensions of phase space were used to
represent its spatial location, and another three dimensions were
used to represent its momentum in each of the three spatial
dimensions, giving each molecule of the gas a certain location in six
dimensional phase space. Thus, if this phase space were divided up
into very many, equally sized cells, each molecule would be located
in one or another of the cells of phase space (the limits of phase
space being determined by the total energy of the gas and the size of
its container). But since exchanging any two molecules in different
cells of phase space would leave the gas in the same kind of
macrostate, Boltzmann argued that the most probable macrostate of the
gas would be the one in which the number of ways that molecules could
be exchanged (or permuted) among the cells is maximum, for it would
correspond to the largest number of different possible microstates.
That state can be shown mathematically to be the one in which the
molecules are most evenly distributed among the cells of six
dimensional phase space. In that kind of macrostate, the molecules
are said to be in statistical equilibrium. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Boltzmanns
definition clearly refers to the same kind of macrostate that was
described in explaining the tendency to randomness, because an even
distribution of molecules among the cells of his six dimensional
phase space is equivalent to an even spatial distribution <i>in three
dimensional space</i> of the three causally relevant factors: (1) the
locations of molecules of each rest mass, (2) their kinetic energies,
and (3) their directions of momentum. But these are basically
different ways of defining randomness. Boltzmanns definition is
<i>statistical</i>, whereas the definition of randomness we have been
using is <i>geometrical</i>. And whereas Boltzmanns explanation is
based on the assumption that all the possible microstates of a gas
are equiprobable, no such assumption is needed to define randomness
as evenness in the distribution of each of the causally relevant
factors in real space. That is, instead of using a six dimensional
phase space to <i>count </i>possible microstates of certain kinds, we
used a geometrical fact about the distribution of causally relevant
factors in uniform, three dimensional space not only to <i>define
</i>non-randomness, but also to <i>explain </i>why such systems
evolve in the direction of randomness over time. The unevenness in
the spatial distribution of any of those factors is what causes it to
be evened out, because any such unevenness entails that certain
(symmetrically interacting) molecules will be in asymmetrical
situations, and that will make them interact in ways that tend to
equalize their distribution in space. That tendency will continue
until there is no longer any unevenness to drive it. It is a change
in the geometrical structure of the whole region.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
authority of mathematics may lead some contemporary naturalists to
argue that Boltzmanns statistical definition of randomness is just
a mathematically more rigorous way of stating the geometrical
definition. But it is not, for his six dimensional phase space is a
mathematical abstraction that precludes explaining the tendency to
randomness geometrically. To be sure, Boltzmanns definition of
randomness as a statistical equilibrium implies that it is
overwhelmingly probable that any system we happen to examine will be
random. But that does not explain why the system has a tendency to
become more random over time. Indeed, his statistical explanation
denies that there is any real tendency toward randomness, if that
means that change really has a direction in time, for it holds <i>only
</i>that we will almost always find them in random states, if one
samples many such systems at many different times. But that does not
explain the tendency to randomness by showing that change really has
that direction over time. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">On
the contrary, Boltzmanns definition of randomness gives rise to
Loschmidts reversibility paradox. The basic laws of physics are
time-symmetrical, which means that, if the molecules all have the
same locations, but exactly opposite momentums, change will take
place as if time were reversed. That means, as Loschmidt pointed out,
that for every non-random microstate that evolves toward randomness,
there must be another microstate that evolves toward non-randomness.
Indeed, since the statistics by which Boltzmann defines randomness
assume that every possible microstate is equally probable, his
definition <i>implies </i>that for every non-random microstate that
evolves toward randomness, there must be another microstate—the one
in which the momentums of all the molecules are exactly reversed—that
proceeds towards the non-random state. Changes in either direction
should occur equally often. But in fact, we never observe closed
systems becoming non-random spontaneously.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote7anc" href="#sdendnote7sym"><sup>vii</sup></a></sup>
</font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
basic source of Loschmidts reversibility paradox is overlooking
space as an ontological cause. It was Boltzmann who first overlooked
space when he argued that randomness is a “statistical equilibrium”
about the molecules in the gas. And the reason our ontological
explanation does not generate Loschmidts reversibility paradox is
that it does not have to assume that all possible microstates of the
system are equally probable. This is not to deny that, among the
abstractly possible microstates that would appear to be random from
the macroscopic standpoint, there are some that would evolve into
non-random macrostates, if they occurred. That possibility is a
consequence of the time symmetry of the basic laws of physics, which
we accept as part of the essential nature of matter. But the
geometrical explanation need not admit that such microstates <i>ever
actually occur </i>as the result of the motion and interaction of
molecules that are already random. Nor is that problematic, since no
one has ever given a good reason to believe that all mathematically
possible microstates are equally probable.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote8anc" href="#sdendnote8sym"><sup>viii</sup></a></sup></font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Loschmidts
paradox is a rigorous way of showing that the statistical definition
of randomness does not explain the time-asymmetry of this most basic
instance of the second law of thermo&shy;dynamics. We can now see
that his reversibility paradox comes from using a statistical
approach that abstracts from the geometrical structure of space. Our
ontological reduction of the tendency to randomness avoids
Loschmidts paradox and explains why the change has a direction in
time, because instead of relying on mathematical abstractions, it
takes the wholeness of space into account as an ontological cause.
The material objects (with their kinetic energies and directions of
motion) have certain locations in the whole region, and that gives
the region the geometrical structure as a whole which is, as we have
seen, the cause of the tendency to randomness. Our ontological causes
enable us to <i>see</i> intuitively why non-random states tend to
become random over time. In the uniform geometrical structure of
space, any unevenness in the distribution of causally relevant
factors is a <i>geometrical structure </i>about the whole region of
molecules that causes them to be evened out. It puts molecules in
local situations where their motion and symmetrical, elastic
interactions will add up over time in the structure of space to
randomness, that is, toward their being evenly distributed on the
micro level. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">This
is not to deny that Boltzmanns statistical definition may provide
thermo&shy;dynamics with a useful way of measuring randomness (and
lack of randomness) or representing them mathematically. Indeed, the
confirmation of quantitative predictions of statistical mechanics
suggests that it is. But a measure of randomness is not the same as
an explanation of why systems tend to become random over time. For
that, we must reduce the mathematical representations to
spatio-materialist ontology. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">This
is to resolve one of the anomalies that arises in the program of
reductionistic materialism, where it is assumed that regularities are
explained by deducing them from the basic laws of physics, initial
and boundary conditions, and relevant mathematical theorems. Bus as
we can now see, the attempt to give an efficient-cause explanations
of the second law of thermodynamics is the mistake. It requires an
ontological explanation, that is, an explanation of the same kind
that explains why the basic laws of physics are true. Those
time-symmetrical laws physical laws are relevant in explaining this
time-asymmetrical regularity, but only because they characterize the
essential nature of the matter contained in the region of space. It
is the how such bits of matter work together with the wholeness of
space that explains the tendency to randomness, for as we have seen,
it is the geometrical structure about the distribution of any of the
three causally relevant factors that puts material objects in
situations where their behavior in accordance with physical laws will
tend to even out their distribution, resulting in evenly distributed
heat. Indeed, geometrical structures about the locations, motions and
interactions of the material objects in which entropy can increase
are what geometrical structures of material objects must coincide
with in order for them to use the free energy to do work.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
explanation of the second law of thermodynamics requires thinking
outside the box. In this case, the box is the assumption that to
explain is to give an efficient-cause explanations. What does not
come under discussion in disputes about the status of the law of
entropy increase is the assumption that any adequate explanation must
fit the deductive-nomological model. It must be shown to follow from
the laws of physics together with relevant initial and boundary
conditions. And since there is nothing temporally asymmetrical about
those laws (or the initial and boundary conditions), the second law
of thermo&shy;dynamics seems to be irreducible. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
time-asymmetry can be explained ontologically, because it replaces
the laws of physics with matter of the appropriate kind and
recognizes that they coincide with a substance with an opposite kind
of essential nature. Though the regularities in the motion and
interaction of such matter in space can be described by laws of
physics using the language of mathematics, that is to abstract the
local regularities about what happens in a spatiomaterial world like
ours and to leave the global regularities behind. By bringing the
ontological causes of the laws of physics to the surface, we
recognize that they depend as much on the structure of space as they
do on the nature of matter. But the structure of space entails its
wholeness. All possible spatial relations among bits of matter fit
together as part of the geometrical structure of space, and by seeing
the distribution of the causally relevant factors (their locations,
kinetic energies and directions of motion) against the background of
the wholeness of space, we see it as a geometrical structure in the
region as a whole. That is to recognize the efficient cause that
produces the greater randomness, for it is that geometrical structure
that puts material objects in situations where they tend to wipe out
the geometrical structure. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">To
be sure, this efficient cause is what is measured by the statistical
improbability developed by Boltzmann. But by abstracting geometrical
structure as an arithmetic measure of randomness, Boltzmann hides the
connection between this efficient cause and its effect. We can <i>see</i>
how the geometrical distribution of causally relevant factors in the
region tends to wipe itself out, because we have a factual of
rational imagination, which includes spatio-temporal and
structuro-temporal imagination, and we understand how the motion and
interactions of the material objects tends to change their spatial
relations, kinetic energies and directions of motion. As time passes,
it adds up in the region to randomness. The connection between the
efficient cause and its effect is necessary, because it is caused
ontologically by the endurance of these substances through time. But
this causal connection cannot be represented in a
deductive-nomological explanation, because the only way it can be
represented by a mathematical formula, like a law of nature, it as a
basic law, like the second law of thermodynamics, which is
irreducible to the other basic laws of physics. Hence, there is no
solution as long as the only kind of explanation that is recognized
to be legitimate are efficient-cause explanations. That is to be
locked in the box of the deductive-nomological model of explanation. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font color="#993366"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif"><b>M<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="OdkC32" align="right" width="64" height="34" border="0">echanical
principles.</b></font></font><font color="#993366"> </font>A less
obvious doubt about the reducibility of the causal connections in
scientific explanation to the basic laws of physics has to do with
the principles of mechanics. The irreducibility of the structural
aspects of mechanical principles has been used by Hilary Putnam and
others to cast doubt on using physics as the foundation for a
complete explanation of the world. Their arguments have contributed
to general consensus about rejecting all forms of reductionism. But
the problems to which they are pointing are solved by
spatiomaterialism. Just as Loschmidts reversibility paradox
arises from failing to recognize how material global regularities can
be explained ontologically, these critic are pointing to three
problems that arise from failing to recognize how structural global
regularities can be explained ontologically. The significance of
ontological philosophy is, in part, therefore, the restoration of the
good name reductionism. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><b>Putnams
Board-and-Peg Argument.</b> Many years ago, Hilary Putnam (1975,
296-7) cited a simple regularity that he argued was not reducible to
the basic laws of physics as required by the materialists
reductionistic program. It can, however, be reduced to
spatiomaterialism by way of the ontological explanation of structural
global regularities. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Putnam
illustrated a basic problem about reductive explanations with a
simple physical system “a board with two holes, a circle one
inch in diameter and a square one inch high, and a cubical peg
one-sixteenth of an inch less than one inch high.” The peg passes
through the square hole, but not the round hole. This regularity
would not be explained, Putnam holds, even if it could be deduced
from the laws of physics governing the behavior of matter in this
system.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US">One
might say that the peg is, after all, a cloud or, better, a rigid
lattice of atoms. One might even attempt to give a description of
that lattice, compute its electrical potential, worry about why it
does not collapse, produce some quantum mechanics to explain why it
is stable, etc. The board is also a lattice of atoms, I will call the
peg system A, and the holes region 1 and region 2.
One could compute all possible trajectories of system A (there are,
by the way very serious questions about these computations, their
effectiveness, feasibility, and so on, but let us assume this), and
perhaps one could deduce from just the laws of particle mechanics or
quantum electrodynamics that system A never passes through region 1,
but that there is at least one trajectory which enables it to pass
through region 2.”</span></font><sup><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><span lang="en-US"><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote9anc" href="#sdendnote9sym"><sup>ix</sup></a></span></font></sup></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Putnam
argued that a deduction of this regularity from physics, if it is
possible at all, is not really an explanation. What explains why the
square peg fits in the square hole, but not in the round hole, is not
the basic laws of physics governing the ultimate constituents. It is
the higher level structure. All that matters is that “the board is
rigid, the peg is rigid, and as a matter of geometrical fact, the
round hole is smaller than the peg, the square hole is bigger than
the cross-section of the peg.” This explanation would hold
regardless of what the peg and board are made of, as long as they are
rigid, and so Putnam argues that such higher-level structural
explanations are “autonomous” and not reducible to physics. It is
our interests, Putnam claims, that make it look as if irreducible
higher-order structures like these are causally relevant. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">What
Putnam is getting at in his example is obviously, however, structural
ontological causation. It is just an instance of a reversible
structural global regularity, like our example of the box of gas.
What is regular in this case is that certain material objects moving
and interacting in the region always have unchanging geometrical
structures. That is a global regularity, even though all of the
global changes are reversible, for it means that the region itself
has a kind of geometrical structure that does not change over time.
The bare existence of those material structures moving around
randomly in the region includes the fact that the peg is sometimes in
one hole, but not the other. By denying that the structure of this
dynamic process can be deduced from the laws of physics, Putnam is,
in effect, making the case for recognizing material structures and
the global aspect of space (that is, its wholeness) as ontological
causes. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Putnam
is not, however, arguing for spatio-materialism. He accepts the
materialist ontology, and he argues that these explanations refer to
geometrical structures only because “we are much more interested in
generalizing to other structures which are rigid and have various
geometrical relations, than we are in generalizing to the next peg
that has exactly this molecular structure.”<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote10anc" href="#sdendnote10sym"><sup>x</sup></a></sup>
That role of special interests is what leads him to argue that
“structural features” are a “higher level” that is
“autonomous” from physics.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Let
me emphasize, however, that space is an ontological cause of this
simple global regularity in two ways. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">First, the
global aspect of space, which is entailed by its structure, is an
ontological cause, along with these derivative ontological causes, of
the simple global regularity being explained. It connects the
geometrical structures of different material objects as parts of the
same world and enables them to interact as geometrical structures. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Second, the
global aspect of space is an essential ontological cause of the
formation of the unchanging geometrical structures of these material
objects, since material structures are derivative ontological causes.
They are by-products of the tendency of potential energy to become
kinetic. And since the spatial relations of the parts of the material
object are constituted by the space that contains them, the
geometrical structures of the board and peg are not universals, but
no less <i>concrete </i>than the material objects that embody them.
What enables the board and peg to move across space without changing
their geometrical structures is that every region of space contains
every possible geometrical structure. It is hard to avoid the
conclusion that the anomaly in this case comes from materialists
overlooking that space is a substance, because to account for this
simple global regularity, all we need is to recognize that space has
the same ontological status as matter.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><b>The
Supervenience of Dispositional Properties. </b>Other philosophers
trying to carry out the materialist reductionistic program have
noticed certain anomalies that arise in the reduction of
dispositional properties. For example, Bigelow and Pargetter (1987,
p. 190) call fragility a “supervenient” property, because it
cannot be reduced to the laws of physics. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Properties
are said to be “supervenient” when they cannot be reduced to
physical properties in the sense of being defined in terms of them. A
definition would pick out exactly the same objects by identifying in
terms of physical properties what is meant by the supervenient
property, which would be another way identifying the same property.
But such definitions cannot be given in some cases. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The most
obvious are functional properties, such as “being a clock,” which
may be realized by objects whose physical structures range from
machines worn on the wrist to tree rings, sun dials, and the amount
of radioactive decay. There is no way to pick out all clocks by their
physical properties, because when one looks for physical properties,
one is force to start listing all the different kinds of physical
objects that could serve as clocks. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">In
particular causes, supervenient properties are thought to be
identical to the physical properties of the object having the
supervenient property. Thus, they hold that any object that is
physically similar to one that has a supervenient property must also
have the supervenient property. But supervenient properties are not
reducible, because it is not possible to describe the physical
properties that are both necessary and sufficient for supervenient
properties. There are just too many different kinds of cases and no
principle by which a list of them can be completed. The reduction
involves, at most, therefore, only an identity between the tokens on
the two levels, not an identity between types. That is what it means
to say that the properties <i>supervene </i>on physical traits.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Reduction
would require an identity between the functional and the physical
types, or what is called “type-identity.” But since functional
properties are supervenient, all the holds is that the functional
property <i>in this case </i>is nothing but the physical properties.
Since only the token of the functional property is identical to the
token of the physical property, or what is called “token-identity.”</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">In
the case of the disposition, fragility, what Bigelow and Pargetter
(1987, p. 190) apparently mean by “supervenience” is that fragile
objects of the same and different kinds can break up or shatter in
different ways in different situations. Different physical properties
are responsible for what happens in different cases, and there is no
physical property that they all have in common by which all the kinds
of cases can all be included. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Supervenience
theorists are eager to reassure us, however, that they are not saying
that non-physical causes are responsible for the exhibition of such
supervenient properties. In each particular case, it is possible, in
principle, to explain physically what happened, and any case that is
physically like it in all relevant respects will also break up in the
same way (or not break up at all). But the disposition is not
reducible to those physical properties (and their effects according
to basic laws of physics), because there is no natural physical kind
or type that is identical to this <i>type </i>of disposition, that
is, which includes all and only fragile objects, making fragility a
supervenient property. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Physical
dispositions can be explained, as we have seen, by spatiomaterialism
as forms of structural global regularities. In addition to the
wholeness of space, the structural ontological causes of the global
regularities are the geometrical structures of the material objects
involved and free energy that is supplied somehow by the conditions
under which the disposition is exhibited. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">What
makes fragility irreducible to the laws of physics is the difficulty
in identifying the structural cause of the irreversible change in the
object before it occurs. A fragile object will break up in different
ways, depending on the precise way free energy is supplied under the
test conditions. That is because different structural causes are
embedded in the same material object. The structural cause in each
case is all the parts of the composite object that do not come apart
(though breaking up may involve a series of such structural causes),
for they are the unchanging structures that determine how objects
break up. That is, fragile objects are just machines that use the
free energy provided by the conditions of its expression to do the
mechanical work of separating chucks of itself from one another. But
they are complex machines that do it different ways in different
cases, depending on how free energy is supplied. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Does
the existence in the material object of many different structural
causes generating many different global regularities mean that
fragility is a supervenient property? That cant be correct, for if
it were, we wouldnt be able to <i>see </i>how all the global
regularities are alike. And we can. Given that the bonds among the
parts of the object are inelastic and cannot absorb much of the free
energy supplied by the impact, we can see how the forces are
communicated by their bonds and spread out geometrically so that
whole groups of bonds break together or not at all. For example, we
can see why a wine glass dropped on concrete will shatter, but when
dropped on a rug which absorbs some of the initial shock, it is more
likely to break at the stem. What happens is just a result of how the
motion and interaction of bits of matter add up in space over time,
including how forces are communicated among the parts of the fragile
object, and with our capacity for spatio-temporal imagination, we can
“see” the similarity about what happens in each case. The
similarities among cases of objects breaking up under impact
(including different kinds of fragile objects) are basically
geometrical, but nonetheless real. Thus, there is a type-type
identity between the ontological causes and the disposition (or
global regularity) they determine. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Supervenience
is just an appearance that a spatiomaterialist world has because
science seeks only efficient-cause explanations. What makes fragility
seem to be irreducible is the assumption that the reductive
explanation must be formulated as a deductive argument from laws of
physics together with initial conditions and mathematics theorems. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
basic laws of physics are local regularities about change that are
constituted jointly by space and matter. They depend on the structure
of space as much as the essential natures of the forms of matter
contained by space. Thus, when the laws of physics are taken as basic
in an efficient-cause explanation, only some of the relevant aspects
of the ontological causes are represented. The structure is space is
included only insofar as it helps constitute the local regularities
described by the laws, but that is to abstract from the wholeness
that is also entailed by the geometrical structure of space. The
wholeness of space is just as relevant to how change unfolds over
time as the aspects of space that are represented by the laws of
physics. It includes all the geometrical aspects of the motions and
interactions of the bits of matter that add up over time to a certain
structural effect. But the wholeness of space is excluded, according
to the deductive-nomological model, from efficient-cause
explanations. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">It
is not easy to translate the geometrical factors that are relevant
such an ontological reduction of dispositions into mathematical
formulas that can be used in conjunction with the laws of physics to
derive a description of the breaking up or shattering. The motion and
interaction of material structures do not add up to simple
quantities, like those involved in the conservation of momentum and
energy. They add up to geometrical structures. But limitations in the
capacity of mathematical formulas to represent geometrical structures
should not be taken as grounds for denying their role or the role of
the geometrical structure of space itself in the ontological
reduction of dispositions. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">It
is not necessary to construct deductions using mathematical formulas,
because the cause that explains the <i>kind </i>of structural global
regularity is a material structure and how its motion and interaction
add up in the wholeness of space, and that can be understood by using
spatio-temporal imagination. It is a matter of seeing how the forces
imposed by the impact are communicated to other parts and how they
build up in certain locations. Insofar as the structural effects
depend on quantitative aspects, such as the strength of the forces
and the distances over which they are exerted, they can be
approximated by computer models that take into account both the
forces and the geometrical structures of each molecule or atom and
their spatial relations to one another in the composite whole. This
is, of course, how materials science has been explaining the
properties of bulk matter ever since computers became widely
available. The capacity of computer simulations to do what formal
mathematical deductions cannot do is evidence of the relevance of the
geometrical structures of the material objects and the geometrical
structure of space itself as ontological causes of these global
regularities.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Fragility
and other such dispositions are, therefore, supervenient properties
only in the sense that they cannot be deduced mathematically from the
basic laws of physics together with appropriate initial and boundary
conditions. But they are not supervenient relative to our ontology,
because when we recognize that the dispositions are constituted by
bits of matter that coincide with space as a substance, we can see
how the wholeness of space so constrains the motion and interaction
of the material structures that they add up over time to global
regularities of certain kinds.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
example of fragility is complicated by the fact that one of its
ontological causes is derivative. Material structures are not basic
ontological causes, but depend on the tendency of potential energy to
become kinetic, and fragility is a disposition in which the very
existence of the ontological cause is at stake. It involves, in other
words, the <i>generation </i>and <i>corruption </i>of (derivative)
substances in our ontology, and thus, is special in way that
parallels the generation and corruption of primary substances in
Aristotles ontology.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
complication about generation and corruption encountered in the case
of fragility is, however, general, for it holds of chemical
interactions generally. They are unlike the interactions in which
molecules serve as catalysts (or enzymes), for in those cases, the
molecules have geometrical structures that persist through the
change, making them ontological causes. But in chemical interactions,
molecules have geometrical structures that contain many different
structural ontological causes, like fragile objects, because their
global regularities also depend on how the free energy that drives
the irreversible processes is supplied. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">A typical
chemical interaction involves an exchange of clusters of atoms
between two original molecules that result in two new molecules.
Their shapes determine how the original molecules fit together and,
so, which parts of each molecule interact with which parts of the
other, and the total force exerted at such moments determines whether
or not the molecules will interact chemically and exchange subgroups
of atoms, forming new kinds of molecules. The free energy comes from
the potential energy of the forces that parts of molecules exert on
one another, but it is structured by spatial relations among parts
that are not changed.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote11anc" href="#sdendnote11sym"><sup>xi</sup></a></sup>
The structural causes in these cases are the clusters of atoms (or
smaller molecules) that do not change their geometrical structures
during the interaction, since only <i>unchanging </i>geometrical
structures of matter are ontological causes. Thus, molecules will
contain different structural causes depending on which other kinds of
molecules are combined with them. But that does not mean that
chemical interactions are supervenient properties or otherwise
ontologically irreducible, at least, not when we recognize that
substantival space is an ontological cause. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><b>Putnams
Argument from Countervailing Conditions.</b> Although Putnam does not
say that they are supervenient, he also argues that dispositions are
often irreducible. His reason is that they are tendencies that hold
only “other things being equal.” Putnam (1987) illustrates the
irreducibility of disposition by considering the solubility of a
sugar cube in water.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote12anc" href="#sdendnote12sym"><sup>xii</sup></a></sup>
</font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">It
might not dissolve when placed in water, he argues, because the water
might already be saturated with sugar. Or because the water might
freeze before the cube can dissolve. Finally, he appeals to
Loschmidts reversibility paradox as a countervailing condition.
The water might happen to be in a state that is the exact
time-reversal of a state that occurs when a larger cube was
dissolving, so that the motions and interactions in this special case
make the cube un-dissolve out of the water and form a crystal. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">It
is materialist reduction that Putnam is talking about, for the
irreducibility of these disposition comes from trying to deduce them
from premises that are “formulas in the language of fundamental
physics”<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote13anc" href="#sdendnote13sym"><sup>xiii</sup></a></sup>
which cannot take into account of all the various exceptional
conditions that might prevent the expression of the disposition. On
the deductive-nomological model of explanation, the only way to
predict what will happen is to trace precisely the motion and
interaction of all the objects in the region over a region of time
and see where it leads, and Putnam denies that all the conditions
that might be relevant to the exhibition of the disposition can be
included in such a deductive argument. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
dissolving of the sugar cube in water is, according to the
spatiomaterialist reduction, just a structured thermo&shy;dynamic
process. The free energy is the potential energy that comes from the
forces that would form weak hydrogen bonds between the sugar and
water molecules. The structural causes are the shapes of the water
molecules, the shapes of the sugar molecules, and the material
structure that results from packing sugar molecules together in the
crystal. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">In
dissolving, weak bonds holding sugar molecules together in the
crystal are replaced by weak bonds with water molecules as a result
of their random motion and interaction with one another in the
region. Opposite electric charges on opposite sides of the water
molecules fit with similar charges on sugar molecules in such a way
that the sugar molecules exchange their bonds with one another for
stronger, less energy-rich bonds with water molecules, freeing
kinetic energy in the process. Thus, when their random motion and
interaction brings these molecules together, sugar molecules are
released from their bonds in the crystal to form bonds with water,
and a new kind of static order comes to exist. That is how matter, as
energy, flows through geometrical structures from potential energy to
evenly distributed heat in this case. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Putnams
doubts about reducibility come from the impossibility of including
countervailing conditions in the deduction. But if the disposition is
recognized to be a <i>global </i>regularity, there can be no
countervailing conditions that are not taken into account, because
all the bits of matter in the region are involved in how their motion
and interaction add up over time. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">If
what prevents the sugar cube from dissolving is that the water is
already saturated with sugar molecules, it is simply the absence of
the free energy in the region that the material structures use to do
the work of freeing them from the crystal. The potential energy
depends on certain spatial relations between the molecules exerting
the forces, and since all the water molecules in the region are
already bound to sugar molecules, the relevant spatial relations do
not exist, and so there is no thermo&shy;dynamic flow of matter from
potential energy to evenly distributed heat to be structured. That
condition is already taken into consideration, if it is explained
ontologically as a global regularity by structural causes and the
global aspect of space.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">On
the other hand, if what keeps the sugar cube from dissolving is a
sudden freezing of the water, that is also something that is already
taken into account by treating it as a global regularity. Global
regularities are regularities about whole regions of space, and that
means they must either be closed or else one must keep track of what
is flowing in and what is flowing out of the region. Although a
sudden freeze would certainly stop the irreversible special theory of
relativity, there is no way it could happen unnoticed. Heat is a form
of matter (that is, kinetic energy is explained ontologically as
kinetic matter), and as a kind of substance, it cannot simply go out
of existence. The tendency to randomness spreads heat throughout the
region, and it can be removed from the region only if there is
something colder in the region to which it can flow. That would be a
thermo&shy;dynamic flow of matter toward evenly distributed heat in
the region that is clearly relevant in explaining the dissolving as a
global regularity. Finally, nothing outside the region could make it
freeze without violating the principle of local action. Thus, a
sudden freezing is not an exception to an explanation of dissolving
as a structural global regularity. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
final countervailing condition Putnam mentions is not explained by
this reduction to spatiomaterialism, for it is just an illusion that
comes from the attempt to carry out a materialist reduction of the
tendency to randomness. Putnam is using Loschmidts paradox as a
countervailing condition. But as we saw in the last chapter, when the
tendency to randomness is explained geometrically, rather than
mathematically, by statistics, there is no reason to believe the
water and sugar molecules would ever be in a microstate that
corresponds to one in which the sugar cube is dissolving except for
all the molecules having exactly opposite momentums. Only the
statistical definition of randomness requires us to believe that all
possible microstates are equally probable.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">None
of the countervailing conditions to exhibiting solubility that Putnam
mentions would be overlooked, therefore, by an explanation of this
disposition as a global regularity, because when the global aspect of
space is recognized as an ontological cause, the whole region where
it occurs is causally relevant. Dispositions are not properties
inherent in the nature of matter, but rather kinds of structural
global regularities, which depend on structural causes, free energy
supplied by a thermo&shy;dynamic flow of matter toward evenly
distributed heat, and a region of space where their geometrical
structures coincide. What makes it seem that exceptional conditions
preclude the ontological reduction of dispositions is the assumption
that a reductive explanation must deduce a description of the
regularity from “formulas in the language of fundamental physics,”
as if the disposition had to follow from the basic laws of physics
without taking account of how structural causes can channel the
thermo&shy;dynamic flow of forms of matter toward evenly distributed
heat in the region. The role of space in imposing those regularities
may make it hard to formulate these ontological explanations as
deductions, but the reduction to the ontology of spatio-materialism
leaves no room for surprises.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Finally,
other apparently irreducible phenomena can be explained in similar
ways. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Prigogine
(1980), for example, points to the phenomenon of self-forming objects
as irreducible.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote14anc" href="#sdendnote14sym"><sup>xiv</sup></a></sup>
He recognizes that it does not occur when entropy is maximum, but
depends on open systems, in which there is a flow of mass and energy
(so-called “dissipative systems”). But far from being an anomaly,
this kind of phenomenon is entailed in a spatiomaterial world like
ours, because self-forming objects are just instances of the tendency
of potential energy to become kinetic.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote15anc" href="#sdendnote15sym"><sup>xv</sup></a></sup>
See the discussion of crystal formation and the conformation of
protein molecules in <font face="Verdana, sans-serif">Structural
global regularities.</font></font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="2" style="font-size: 10pt"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Chaos”
is likewise cited as evidence of emergent phenomena. These are
situations in which structural global regularities suddenly appear
from apparently chaotic, or random, dynamic processes, such as a
turbulent flow suddenly becoming highly structured. What makes them
seem inexplicable, however, is failing to take space into account in
one way or another, either by not recognizing the structural causes
at work in the region, by not taking the geometrical structure of the
boundary conditions of the system into account, or by ignoring the
structure of the space within those boundaries. When they are taken
into account, it is not surprising that the quantitative aspects of
the motion and interaction of bits of matter in the region would fit
together geometrically with those spatial structures so that their
motion and interaction add up over time to certain regular, repeated
patterns.</font><sup><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote16anc" href="#sdendnote16sym"><sup>xvi</sup></a></font></sup><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">
They are just structural global regularities. The anomalies all come
from overlooking structural ontological causes and how they work
together with the global aspect of space. </font></font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0; page-break-before: always">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font color="#993366"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif"><b>F<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="OdkC33" align="right" width="55" height="34" border="0">unctions.</b></font></font>
The recognition of supervenient properties is the most common way of
describing the failure of reductionism,<sup> <a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote17anc" href="#sdendnote17sym"><sup>xvii</sup></a></sup>
and functional properties are the example that has forced
philosophers of science to recognize that some properties are
supervenient. The main problem is that they may be realized by
indefinitely many different and seemingly unconnected sets of
physical traits, as illustrated by such artifacts as clocks. As we
have noted, clocks may be realized by objects whose physical
structures range from machines worn on the wrist to tree rings, sun
dials, and the amount of radioactive decay. Artifact are a special
case, which is one sense are not so problematic, because we know that
they depend on the intentions of subjective beings. In another sense,
they are more problematic, because it requires the reduction of
intentions. However, functional properties also play an enormous role
in biological, where they pose a similar problem. For example, hearts
are mechanisms for circulating energy in multicellular organisms, but
they cannot easily be picked out by their physical properties,
because they vary from simple gastrovascular cavities to elaborate
circulatory systems with arteries and veins involving one or more
hearts of various kinds. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">There
is no general agreement about the significance of the existence of
supervenient properties. At one extreme, they are considered a way of
defending physicalism against the claims that there are processes
that cannot be explained in terms of the laws of physics. At the
other extreme, they have attracted other philosophers of science
toward emergentism, is the sense of the belief that there are laws in
less general branches of science that cannot be reduced to physics. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Though
supervenience theorists generally deny that upper level <i>laws
</i>mentioning supervenient properties are irreducible, supervenient
properties do entail a kind of law that is not reducible. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Supervenience
theorists insist that the causal connections in which supervenient
properties may be involved can always be explained by the physical
causes that are responsible for the regularity in that case, though,
of course, those physical causes vary with the kind of physical
properties that realized the supervenient property in that case. They
are right to deny that there is any need irreducible causal laws
(that is, laws that can be used to explain events by efficient
causes). No one believe that clocks or hearts require anything but
physical laws for their operation. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Even so,
however, the reduction of the less general regularity to the laws of
physics is not complete, because the physical explanation of what
happens in each instance of a supervenient property does not explain
the indefinitely large variety of different sets of physical traits
that may realize the super&shy;venient property. In other words, the
grouping of those cases in such a way that they all have the same
supervenient property is itself a regularity that has not been
explained. If supervenient properties are anything more than purely
subjective projections onto the world, then the fact that such
physically diverse objects can be grouped together in describing
upper level regularities is something that needs to be explained in
the end. That regularity may not be a law of nature in the sense of a
law of nature that supports an efficient cause explanation (according
to the deductive-nomological model). But it does imply the existence
of an order of some kind about the world, and that order cannot be
reduced to the laws of physics and conditions described in physical
terms. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">In
the case of functional properties, furthermore, the prime example of
supervenient properties, there is even more reason to suspect that
there are irreducible laws of nature, because functional properties
are typically used to give functional explanations. It is not just
that certain organs in multicellular bodies are all have the function
of circulating energy to all parts of the body, but that the
existence of such organs seems to be explained by that function. But
if functions are causes that can explain the traits that have them,
it involves causal connections like those in efficient causes. The
function is a different event or condition from the trait it would
explain, just as the efficient cause is different from its effect. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">It is
certainly not like the connection between an ontological cause and
its effect. The function is not constituted by the trait described
physically. If it were, there would be nothing supervenient about the
functional property. Instead, traits are said to “realize” the
function, because there are many different ways that functional
properties can be realized. But that makes it even more mysterious
how the function can be said to explain the trait, since the same
function can be served by physically different traits. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Furthermore,
since a functional explanation explains the trait by the function, it
would not help to discover that the trait constitutes (or realizes)
the function, because the function must be prior to the trait to
“cause” it. And that would require explaining where the function
comes from or how it could make material objects have the physical
properties that would constitute them.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
prior issue is, therefore, whether functional explanations in biology
are valid and, if so, how. Though most philosophers are inclined to
believe that they are valid in some sense, there has been no
generally accepted defense of their validity. The received view is
that they are really just disguised historical explanations of a
contingent process of selection, which do not justify prediction of
the traits that will evolve.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote18anc" href="#sdendnote18sym"><sup>xviii</sup></a></sup>
But if evolution is a global regularity in a world of matter and
space in time, there is a sense in which they are valid explanations.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">There is,
of course, no question of functional explanations being valid, if
that means that the function is a substance that acts on matter to
give it the trait, that is, to give it the physical properties that
enable it to serve the function. That is the kind of causal
connection entailed by Aristotelian teleology, or what is called
“final causation.” Aristotle believed that having an essential
form would make natural change take place in the particular substance
for the sake of an end, final cause, or telos, which is said to be
good for substances of its natural kind. Naturalists have long since
recognized that there are no essential forms in the natural world
that work in the way Aristotle supposed. That is entailed by
materialism about the natural world, which has prevailed since the
beginning of modern science, and essential forms acting as final
causes are not among the substances assumed by spatiomaterialism.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif">The
validity of functional explanations.</font> The validity of
functional explanations in biology is, however, entailed by
ontological philosophy, and the way in which their validity is
explained, confirms their validity in a far stronger sense than is
currently recognized. Functions do cause the traits that serve them,
and if evolution is due to reproductive causation, functions explain
why organisms have the traits they do in a way that makes it
possible, in principle, to predict that the traits will evolve. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">That
is not to say that every physical property of the traits is
predictable. The traits usually involve some physical properties that
could be otherwise. But enough of the physical properties of the
traits are determined by their functions that they can be recognized
by their physical properties in the organisms. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Evolution
is due to reproductive causation. That is, evolution is a global
regularity that is explained ontologically as the kind of change that
is constituted by reproductive cycles and the wholeness of space. The
reproductive cycles are material structures of a certain kind using
the available free energy to go through cycles in which they both
reproduce and do non-reproductive work that controls conditions that
affect their reproduction. The regularity about change in the region
over time includes , as we have seen, both a gradual change during
each stage in the direction of maximum holistic power for organisms
of their kind (or their natural perfection) and a series of
evolutionary stages in the direction of the natural perfection of
life itself. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Since
reproducing organisms impose natural selection on themselves (by the
scarcity caused by generations of reproduction in space), what is
regular about change in the region over time is that every possible
increase in the power of the reproducing organisms is necessarily
made actual as it becomes possible. Each random variation of their
structures that is acquired because it controls some condition
affecting its reproduction is a trait. Its function is to control the
relevant condition. And since the conditions that it is possible for
random variations on evolving organisms to control are “in the
cards,” so to speak, they can, in principle, be used to predict the
traits that will evolve. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Likewise,
for the revolutionary episodes. The higher levels of part-whole
complexity in the structures of the reproducing organisms that can be
tried out at each stage of evolution depend on the natures of the
reproducing organisms that already exist, because they must originate
as a radical random variations on existing structures. And whether
they can control some relevant condition that was previously out of
reach depends on the nature of the region where conditions affect
their reproduction. That is also “in the cards,” so to speak, and
since both the possibility and the functionality can be known, the
stages of evolution are, in principle, predicable. Thus, once again,
even higher levels of structure in reproducing organisms can be
explained by the function that it is possible for such structures to
serve. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Actual
predictions of the new traits that occur in gradual evolution by
their possible functions would require the capacity to imagine every
possible random variation and to see what condition those secondary
effects would control, and that is usually not possible. Thus, it is
only after the change has occurred that we are usually in a position
to see which possible function was responsible for the trait's
evolution. But in the case of revolutionary evolution, it is easier
to see the possible functions of new kinds of primary structures, and
that is the kind of functional explanation that was used to trace the
course of evolution in the previous section.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">This
ontological explanation of evolution as a global regularity entails,
in other words, a necessity about the kind of change that takes place
over time in the region of space. It is a kind of regularity that
makes prediction possible, in principle. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">This
is formally similar to the explanation of dispositions and ordinary
causal connections between events described in the last chapter, for
those regularities were also global regularities explained by matter
and space as ontological causes. In dispositions, the event
ordinarily called the “cause” is typically the way free energy is
supplied, and the irreversible change that takes place is the effect.
</font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">In
this case, however, reproductive causation necessarily makes every
possible increase in the power of primary structures actual, and
given the meaning that &quot;function&quot; has ontologically, that
means that it necessarily makes every functional trait that is
possible actual. Possible functions are, therefore, the cause of the
evolution of certain kinds of secondary effects in much the same
sense that compressing and releasing an elastic object causes it to
spring back or putting a sugar cube in water causes it to dissolve.
The evolutionary changes that make it possible for the random
variations on reproducing organisms being tried out to be functional
in a new way are what causes that trait to evolve. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Though
functional explanation are valid, the functions are not essential
forms with causal powers, as Aristotle assumed. In Aristotelian
teleology, functions are assumed as a basic principle (if not
substance) of the ontology, and thus, their causal powers are not
explained, but merely assumed. But in evolution by reproductive
causation, the ontological causes are the kinds of space and matter
that exist in a world like ours, for they are the ultimate
ontological causes of reproductive global regularities. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif">The
ontological reducibility of functional properties.</font> The
predictability of traits by their functions should remove any doubts
about the reducibility of functions or functional properties to the
ontology of naturalism. Doubts about their reducibility come from the
understanding that contemporary Darwinists have of the causes of
evolutionary change. They are, as pointed out in the explanation of
reproductive global regularities, accidentalists. They think of
natural selection as being imposed on living organisms from outside
by unpredictable changes in their environment, and they worry about
the availability of random variations to meet the new conditions in
the best possible way. For them, in Kauffman's (1993) words,
evolution merely &quot;cobbles together jury-rigged contraptions.” </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">This
view of evolution is another example of the effect of overlooking the
wholeness of space as a cause of regularities about change over time,
for instead of seeing evolution as the way that reproductive cycles
add up in space over time, it sees evolution as driven by an
externally imposed natural selection. Thus, it seems to contemporary
Darwinists that different traits might have served the same
functions. Since that means that there is no necessary connection
between functions and the traits that serve them, functions are said
to be &quot;super&shy;venient properties&quot; relative to the
physical nature of the traits that have them. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">But
if there is a necessary connection between the functions and the
traits that serve them, as implied by their status as consequences of
spatiomaterialism, then functional properties are, in principle,
reducible to the ontology of naturalism. This is to reduce functional
properties to our ontology in much the same way that we reduced
dispositional properties, except that the relevant global regularity
depends on reproductive causation, rather than structural causation.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">It
is the progressiveness of evolutionary change that entails the
validity of functional explanations and the ontological reducibility
of functional properties. From the beginning, I have described
evolutionary change as change in the direction of natural perfection,
and I have distinguished various kinds of natural perfection: the
natural perfection of the organisms at each stage, the natural
perfection of their combination in the ecology, and the natural
perfection of life in the series of stages of evolution. Even
evolutionary change itself has a kind of natural perfection about it
because of the way that what happens at each moment contributes to
the progress. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
direction of evolutionary change was called “natural perfection,”
because it always involves a maximum holistic power and that is the
kind of part-whole relation that is optimal in a spatiomaterial
world. It is “natural” perfection, because it is the kind of
perfection that is appropriate in a natural world. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Though it
depends on the thermodynamic flow of matter from forms of free energy
to energy bound as evenly distributed heat, nothing can structure
thermo&shy;dynamic order except material structures, and reproductive
causation is making the most of structural causation by shaping
reproducing organisms to be as powerful as possible in using the
available free energy to control conditions in the world. To be sure,
until the evolution of reason, organisms acquire only those powers
that control conditions that affect their own reproduction. But that
is simply what is required for structural causes that are maximally
powerful to exist in a world of matter and space in time. No
structural causes, regardless how powerful, would last very long, if
they did not use their power to ensure their own existence. Organisms
do that in a way that makes them as powerful as possible, and
rational beings do that because it is good. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
natural perfection produced by reproductive causation made it
possible to explain goodness as contributing to natural perfection.
Each part of such optimal part-whole relations makes a necessary
contribution to its maximum holistic power, and thus, each is good in
the sense of contributing to the natural perfection of the whole of
which it is part. And as we have seen, this explanation is a
definition of “good” that vindicates all our deepest and firmly
held convictions about what is good and bad (and about what is right
and wrong).</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">By this
definition, <i>goodness </i>and <i>perfection </i>are related to one
another as the property of the <i>part</i> is to the property of the
<i>whole </i>in the products of reproductive causation. When the
whole is perfect, all the parts are as good as they can be, and when
all the parts are as good as they can be, the whole is perfect. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Moreover,
it follow that the function that each non-reproductive structural
effect has is good <i>for the organism </i>of which it is part, that
each kind of organism is good <i>for the ecology </i>of which it is
part, and that each level of organization in the structures of
organisms that comes to exist with new stages of evolution are good
<i>for what exists in the whole region </i>in which evolutionary
change is happening. Ultimately, therefore, there is one whole on the
planet (or planetary system) to whose perfection all the good parts
make a necessary contribution. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">To
be functional is, therefore, to be good. Since their functions
explain the traits that evolve, what explains the traits that
organisms have is their goodness. The goodness of the random
variations is what explains why they are naturally selected.
Likewise, since what explain each new stage of evolution is the
functionality of its higher level of part-whole complexity, what
explains each new stage of evolution is its goodness. The goodness of
the higher level of organization is what explains why it is naturally
selected. This connection to the nature of goodness is another way of
saying that evolution is progressive. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0; page-break-before: always">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font color="#993366"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif"><b>R<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="OdkC34" align="right" width="73" height="32" border="0">ational
causation.</b></font></font> The remaining problems about the nature
of causation arise in the branches of science known as psychology and
social science. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Psychology
has to do with the explanation of individual behavior, and that is
problematic mainly because we know too much. As rational beings, we
have a special way of seeing into the minds of other rational beings
(and subjective animals generally). We ordinarily explain individual
behavior by the reasons that the individual has for it, that is, the
beliefs, intentions, desires and the like that are responsible for
it, or subjectivistic understanding, as we have been calling it.
There are two problems,</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">One problem
in this field is that rational explanations do not seem to be the
kind of explanation that a branch of natural science ought to be
seeking. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">But another
problem is that, even if they are, they do not seem to be reducible
to the kinds of explanation given in physics. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
social science have to do with the explanation of social phenomena,
or what has been explained here as the behavior of spiritual animals.
We know that human societies are different from other groups of
animals, because our capacity for subjectivistic understanding gives
us an “inside view,” so to speak, of the phenomena. However, that
view is not based on perception and, thus, is not from the vantage of
natural science. Thus, there is a problem about the nature of the
object that is being studied by the social sciences. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The problem
about reductionism in this case is just opposite to the other cases
considered here. Though there have been social scientists, like Comte
and Durkheim, who thought that societies are not reducible to the
individuals, that view is not common these days. Contemporary
naturalists tend to assume that social phenomena must somehow be
explained in terms of the individuals who make up human societies,
because they do not see how there could be any relevant causes that
arise from the nature of society as a whole.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The main
philosophical problems about the nature of causation in social
science has to do, therefore, with showing how social phenomena can
be explained as a result of the nature of the individuals, the
regularities in their behavior, and the situations in which they act.
The project of explaining social phenomena in that way is called
“methodological individualism,” and its most popular current form
is sociobiology, which bypasses individual psychology and tries to
explain social behavior by genes that have evolved in individuals.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
ontological explanation of the nature of change provides, however, a
solution in all of these cases. Though the laws of nature (or
regularities) discovered in psychology and social science may not be
reducible to the laws of physics, they are reducible to the
ontological causes recognized by spatiomaterialism in a world like
ours. Once again, the reason is the failure to recognize that the
global regularities are caused ontologically by the wholeness of
space and other substances contained by it, both basic and
derivative, like material structures and reproductive cycles. Indeed,
all the basic phenomena investigated by both psychology and social
science have already been explained in tracing the course of
evolution by reproductive causation. What follows here is just a
reminder of their relevance. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font color="#993366"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif"><b>P<img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAEsAAAAeCAMAAABT0xOcAAAAYFBMVEX////w8Png4PPQ0O3jx5vAwOiwsOKgoNyQkNaAgNBwcMpgYMRQUL5AQLhVSzowMLI5MicgIKwQEKYAAJkAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAABl64e+AAABEElEQVR4nO2SYY+DMAiGa7FFbDmvsP//W486F1Pn3HIx++SbWKDiQ6G6/kP93kw/hymud+epd3qSLtbF+gZLmPlFSmiilN6y2NMAsp/SRETvWVZ9IBUMKJrtiJxVcwi2uhzQMgqGtLAW1wyxSoWTbFg4ahyVJ2NYZ9mMSKosjWY8SzWVtbieFS0CVoZNj2g9YszFIl+KV4350aMBarH6rO4Ed3JCxdSwwM5TR4udNTjiMNrR+JC1RKrd1D3NyzTNU1Px3gZAOG/cWWI79cvVlU7mZCVPeyyCEOoYcbBFEAI9WJoBUBo3+Vjfa3HSsDby5eXNrzLCPKiE7T/RKsUPUIoAw1x4OmL9TxfrYu2xTtMfmsmIdWhX0wcAAAAASUVORK5CYII=" name="OdkC35" align="right" width="75" height="30" border="0">sychology.</b></font></font>
In the first instance, psychology is based on our ordinary way of
understanding human beings. That is to explain individual behavior
and beliefs by the reason which are responsible for it, or what I
have been calling “rational explanation.” For decades now, it has
been is called “folk psychology” in epistemological philosophy of
science, because it is generally assumed that such explanations
depend on learning the relevant “laws of nature” as a normal part
of the process of growing up in human society. But it has been
explained here as subjectivistic understanding.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Subjectivistic
understanding is part of the cognitive capacity I have been calling
“reason,” for it is the use of rational imagination to think
about the causes of beliefs and behavior in subjective animals like
us. Reason has been explained here as a capacity that derives from
the use of psychological sentences, for that is what enables the
subject to represent and, thus, reflect on the psychological states
that are involved causally in the process by which their animal
behavior guidance system. That is the basis of the subjects
capacity to use the theoretical and practical reasoning that takes
place in his own brain to simulate the reasoning going on in the
brains of others, and thus, it is what enables the subject to see
into the minds of other subjects.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Naturalistic
understanding is another part of the capacity of reason. It is the
use of rational imagination to think about the causes and effects of
states of objects in space, or the kind of imagination that first
evolved in primitive spiritual animals, which had only the use of
natural sentences (with a subject-predicate grammar). The use of
natural sentences gives the subject the concept of a state of affairs
(or event) in nature, and since reason uses a faculty of imagination
that is built on the spatio-temporal imagination of mammals and the
structuro-temporal imagination of primates, it involves the ability
to understand efficient causes and their effects (both those that
depend on these basic aspects of the spatial structure of the world
and those that are learned from experience of other regularities in
the natural world). </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif">H<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="OdkC36" align="right" width="73" height="20" border="0">ermeneutics.
</font>By “hermeneutics,” I mean the belief that the best that
science can do in the way of explaining individual beliefs and
behavior is to give rational explanations. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">This
view is now most commonly defended in the philosophy of social
science. There seems to be no hope explaining social phenomena unless
the beliefs and behavior of individual can be explained. Even the
gathering of statistics about individuals, as in economics and
sociology, depends on being able to start with the ordinary
explanations of their beliefs and behavior. Thus, those who are eager
to have the social sciences recognized as a form of genuine knowledge
about the world seem forced to accept a hermeneutical understanding
of individual behavior.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Hermeneutics
is also the foundation of most social psychology and clinical
psychology for the same reason. But in psychology, there are attempts
to give a deeper explanation of individual behavior, which would make
it clear that psychology is a branch of natural science and, thus, no
less entitled to claim that its conclusions are science. They will be
considered next.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
main problem with simply accepting rational explanations as
scientific explanations is that the empirical method does not lead to
general agreement about what is true, at least not in a way that is
comparable to using the empirical method with efficient-cause
explanations. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">This
problem with the empirical method was discussed when the empirical
method was introduced (in <font face="Verdana, sans-serif">Method</font>).
The empirical method is the attempt to discover what is true by
inferring to the best explanation of what is observable in the
natural world, and as we noted, it is a method that can, in
principle, be used in conjunction with various kinds of explanation:
efficient-cause explanations, rational-cause explanations and
ontological-cause explanations. The way that it leads to agreement in
the case of efficient-cause explanations has made natural science a
spectacular success in the attempt to discover the true. Its use in
conjunction with ontological-cause explanations is the foundation of
ontological philosophy, where it may also lead to general agreement,
this time about the basic substance constituting the natural world.
But in the case of rational-cause explanations, it fails to lead to
agreement about what is true. Different rational subjects trying to
explain the same behavior (or the same beliefs) of some individual
often wind up with different conclusions, and no matter how much they
consider one anothers rational explanations, there does not seem
to be any way for them to reach agreement. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The problem
about reaching agreement on rational-cause explanations is sometimes
called the hermeneutical circle, because the attempt to resolve
disputes about what an individual intends or believes in a particular
case depends inferring to the best rational cause explanation. Since
one standard of the best explanation is explaining the widest range
of phenomena, the widest range in this case is the range of the
individuals behavior. But for other instances of the individuals
behavior to be relevant in judging which explanation is best, they
must also be explained rationally, and thus, the same problem arises
about explaining them. The rational explanation of one instance of
behavior depends on the rational explanation of the other, and that
instance on yet another, so that in the end, all the behavior has to
be interpreted. The rational explanation of the part thus depends on
the rational explanation of the whole, and as it happens, even when
all relevant behavior is included, there are still differences among
the subjective scientists. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The reason
for these disputes can be explained, as we did earlier, by the nature
of rational explanation. It comes down to disagreements among the
subjective scientists themselves in basic their beliefs about the
world, especially their most basic and general beliefs, such as moral
and religious beliefs. An inference to the best rational explanation
is an inference to the fewest and simplest psychological states that
will explain the widest range of behavior, but it depends on a
judgment about which alternative explanation is the most coherent,
that is, rational selection. And since rational explanation involves
using ones own process of practical and theoretical reasoning to
simulate the reasoning of others, the judgment about which
alternative set of psychological states is simplest and fewest
depends on using ones own desires and beliefs (including beliefs
about what is good) as the background in which they are compared.
Since that background varies from one subjective scientist to the
next, subjective scientists tend to disagree about which is the best
rational explanation. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Inferences
to the best efficient-cause explanations are not subject to this kind
of dispute, because naturalistic understanding involves only beliefs
about the natural world which are ultimately based on perception. No
judgments about what is good and bad, or what is meaningful, or how
one feels is relevant in natural science. But they are the stuff of
the subjective sciences.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Insofar
as such disagreements about the best rational-cause explanation are
not resolvable, it is apparent that the conclusions of subjective
science are not objective. The ontological explanation of the nature
of reason shows that there is a good deal of validity in rational
explanations, because the animal behavior guidance systems of
rational subjects do work in basically the same way. Thus, to some
extent, they can be used to discover the true, though the range in
which they are trustworthy may be limited to more immediate
intentions is rather well defined social situations. However,
rational explanations will lead to much greater agreement about the
reasons behind individual behavior when ontological philosophy
evolves in philosophical spiritual animals, because there will be a
great deal more agreement about background beliefs and values.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">However,
a genuine science of individual needs more than rational explanation,
because psychology must be integrated as a branch of natural science.
Thus, naturalists are on the right track in attempting to reduce
rational cause explanations to the kind that is used in natural
science. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif">N<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="OdkC37" align="right" width="73" height="20" border="0">aturalism.</font>
There have been various attempts to reduce rational-cause
explanations to efficient-cause explanations, and as a way of showing
the relevance of the ontological explanation of the nature of change
to issues about causation, let me mention the main varieties here. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><b>Behaviorism.</b>
The original attempt to turn psychology into science is behaviorism,
that is, the attempt to discover a law of nature describing the
regularities about individual behavior so that it would be possible,
in principle, to explain particular actions by efficient causes.
These first attempts tried to reduce behavior to what is now called
“respondent conditioning,” exemplified by Pavlovs dog, in
which behavior that is already triggered by some stimulus is
conditioned so that it comes to be triggered by another stimulus. It
was followed by the theory of operant conditioning, developed mainly
by B. F. Skinner. Operant conditioning is based on the law of effect.
When kinds of behavior that are generated spontaneously or randomly
are reinforced, they are more likely to generated again, especially
under similar stimulus conditions. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><b>Functionalism.</b>
Behaviorism has been replaced in psychology by cognitive psychology.
It departs from its predecessor by recognizing that behavior is
mediated by internal states, and thus, it takes the project of
psychology to be to discover the internal states that are
responsible. But cognitive psychology does not attempt to discover
the physical properties of internal states. Instead, it attempt to
discover them in terms of their causal connections to input states
and output states of the organism. That leads to what is called
“functionalism.”</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><b>Neurophysiology.
</b>The other thriving trend in psychology is the attempt to reduce
rational explanations to neurophysiology, that is, to the states of
the brain. (Though brain states may still be defined functionally,
the functions are physiological functions, and thus, involve
descriptions that are more closely tied to physics.) </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
significance of ontological philosophy for each of these projects is
implicit in what has been said in tracing the course of evolution as
a global regularity caused by reproductive cycles and the wholeness
of space.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><b>Neurophysiology.</b>
The problems of neurophysiology have been addressed by this
ontological explanation of the course of evolution by tracing the
stages of animal evolution from somatosensory through manipulative
animals to rational subjects (stages 4-9). The nervous system was
explained as an animal behavior guidance system, but the biggest
departure from received neurophysiology comes from the recognition of
levels of neurological organization and what each contributes to the
animal system of representation. That functional explanation shows
how structures in the nervous system serve as a faculty of
imagination, that is, a mechanism in which covert behavior calls up
sequences of images from memory in the sensory input system to
represent the effects of motion on the relations of objects in space,
of manipulation on the geometrical structures of objects in space,
the causal relations among states of objects in space, and the causal
relations among psychological states. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">This is a
different kind of neurophysiological explanation of behavior than is
expected by the current defenders of neurophysiology, such as Paul
and Patricia Churchland, for they are eliminative materialists, who
expect rational explanations (or “folk psychology,” as they call
it) to be replaced by neurophysiology. By contrast, this explanation
of how the brain works explains the validity of rational explanation
by showing not only how they are valid explanations, but also by
explaining how it is possible for rational subject to give such
explanations of beliefs and behavior. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">As a
functional explanation of those structures in the brain, however, it
leaves a great deal yet to be explained. Indeed, all the detailed
mechanisms that are required to serve these functions remain to be
explained. But those nervous mechanisms are quickly yielding to the
astonishing progress of empirical neurophysiology. Since they are
coming at it from opposite directions, what ontological philosophy
implies and what empirical neurophysiology is disclosing should
converge on a single, complete explanation of how the brain works
before long. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><b>Behaviorism.</b>
What made it possible to explain the stages of neurological
organization by reproductive causation was the recognition that the
faculty of imagination does not require the mechanism of
embryological development (that is, the multicellular biological
behavior guidance system) to provide the detailed structure of the
brain. It needs to provide only the basic systems of the faculty of
imagination, because its structure makes possible a contained form of
reproductive causation in which the behavioral schemata behind covert
behavior can evolved by reinforcement selection. That is, given that
there are random variations on behavioral schemata, the learning of
new ways of behaving and thinking can be explained by a memory
circuit that strengthens the synapses of neurons involved in
generating behavior of that kind when they are successful by
genetically determined criteria (such as success in getting around in
space or success in social relations mediated by linguistic
behavior). Thus, the brain has a built-in structure that internalizes
structures of the world, from the spatial structure of the natural
world to language and the capacity for reflection. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">This is an
explanation of the validity of operant conditioning, at least, in
mammals and beyond. The law of effect is true, on this functional
explanation of the faculty of imagination, because the regularity it
describes is the evolution of behavioral schemata by reinforcement
selection within the mammalian brain. (The memory circuit works in a
similar, but far more limited way in non-mammalian vertebrates, and
thus, the learning in pigeons was limited enough to stand out in the
kinds of experiments that Skinner conducted.) </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">But this
neurophysiological explanation of operant conditioning reveals that
it is not as open ended and unstructured as Skinner believed, because
it is the evolution of behavior schemata that operate as various
faculties of imagination (spatio-temporal, structuro-temporal,
naturalistic and subjectivist imagination). That is, behind the overt
operant behavior, including verbal behavior) is a covert operant that
calls up sequences of images of a certain kind, and thus, from the
point of view of the subject, the behavior is generated in world from
an understanding of the world that sees the actual against the
background of the possible. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><b>Functionalism.
</b>The neurophysiological structures in the nervous system have been
explained by the functions of various systems at a series of level of
neurological organization. That is a functional explanation in the
strong sense that is entailed by reproductive causation and the
recognition that evolution is progressive, increasingly sophisticated
ways of serving as an animal system of representation are what causes
each higher level of neurological organization. And these functional
explanations of the levels of neurological organization include
functional explanations of various nervous structures in the brain,
such as the <i>behavior generator</i>, the <i>local image</i>, the
<i>object image</i>, and the like. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">These
functionally described states are not quite what cognitive psychology
is looking for. In the first place, they are tied certain
neurophysiological structures in the brain, and thus, internal states
are no explained exclusively in terms of their causal connections to
(sensory) input and (behavioral) output. Secondly, the functions that
are ascribed to internal states are not merely that of representing
aspects of the world, but as representing objects, representing them
as being located in space, as having geometrical structures, as being
efficient causes, and even as having reasons. And the functions of
such states depend on them being parts of a faculty of imagination. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">This
departure from received functionalism in psychology solves the
problems that have been encountered, and by considering them more
closely, those who are interested can see how. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif">Intentionality.
</font>The philosophical problems about the nature of mind arise from
certain aspects that seem to be incapable of explanation by the basic
laws of physics. One of those problems is consciousness, or the
subjective aspect of experience, such as the phenomena appearance of
the natural world in perception. The foundations for the ontological
explanation of consciousness were discovered in Properties, and the
way in which it explains the unity of mind, or the fact that many
qualia appear to the subject at the same time, was explained as part
of the discussion of the mammalian brain (Stage 6). The other main
problem, which will be discussed here, has to do with intentionality.<sup>
<a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote19anc" href="#sdendnote19sym"><sup>xix</sup></a></sup></font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
problem about <i>intentionality</i> is how there can be psychological
states that are <i>about</i> the world. We know there are
psychological states about the world, because they are what we use to
give rational explanations of behavior (and beliefs) of rational
subjects (and other subjective animals). Though the mind obviously
depends in some way on the nature of the brain, it does not seem that
that the <i>aboutness</i> of psychological states can be explained by
the basic laws of physics. Functionalists believe, however, that they
can be explained as functional states. No one denies that it is
plausible to suppose that the intentionality of psychological states
involves a system of representation built into the brain. But how can
states of the brain be representations? How can they be about the
world?</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Intentionality
cannot be explained as something we <i>read into</i> the phenomena,
as if it were just a useful way of describing or summing up what
happens in nature.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote20anc" href="#sdendnote20sym"><sup>xx</sup></a></sup>
That would be to deny the reality of the phenomenon, at least as part
of the natural world. And it is hard to see how even that is possible
without contradicting oneself, because no one who holds that we are
reading things into nature (or describing them in certain ways) can
deny there are intentional states in the world. Those very
interpretations are <i>about </i>objects in the natural world. The
only way to avoid self-contradiction, therefore, is to hold that
ones own mental states are not part of the natural world, and that
is, ontologically speaking, a form of mind-body dualism. It implies
that there are two basically different kinds of substances in the
world: natural entities without real intentional states, and beings
like us, who must have them, since we do refer to other objects and
ascribe intentional states to them. This is a disastrous kind of
dualism, for there is no way to explain how substances whose natures
differ as mind and body are related to one another as a single world.
And even if there were, it would be to give up naturalism and, thus,
ontological philosophy.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote21anc" href="#sdendnote21sym"><sup>xxi</sup></a></sup></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Though
it is generally agreed among naturalists that intentionality is to be
explained functionally, there is little agreement about what such a
functional explanation would involve. There are two main schools of
thought about the nature of &quot;functionalist theories&quot; of
psychological states, and both would explain intentionality in terms
of representations in the brain. One theory holds that the most
science can do is give functional <i>descriptions</i> of the brain.
The other holds that natural science can give functional <i>explanations
</i>of the brain, although it is based on an analysis of functional
explanations (the etiological theory) that precludes their reduction
to the ontology of naturalism. A brief account of these theories will
provide a sense of the obstacles that intentionality poses for a
naturalistic metaphysics. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><b>Intentional
states as functional states. </b>The still dominant view of
psychological states is called &quot;functionalism,” a philosophy
of psychology inspired by the analogy between minds and computers a
quarter century ago.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote22anc" href="#sdendnote22sym"><sup>xxii</sup></a></sup>
The idea is that psychological states can be understood as internal
states in a complex system whose kinds can be distinguished in terms
of the causal roles those states play in mediating between input and
output, much as internal states of computers explain its output in
response to certain kinds of input because of how internal states are
related by the program. Thus, the goal of psychology is supposed to
be giving a functional description of the mind/brain, much as one
would a computer, that is, by describing a system of interconnected
internal states that tells how all possible inputs would affect
output. Two points about functionalism of this kind should be
noticed, </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">First,
it denies the possibility of reducing functional systems to the kinds
of physical processes that realize them. According to the
deductive-nomological model of explanation, the reduction of one
theory to another depends on establishing a necessary connection
between the terms used by one theory and the terms used by the other,
and functionalists deny that there is any such type-type identity
between functional states and their physical realizations in the
brain.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote23anc" href="#sdendnote23sym"><sup>xxiii</sup></a></sup>
That is, the functional properties of a system are thought to
&quot;supervene&quot; on its physical properties. One of the deepest
convictions functionalists have is that, just as physically different
kind of computers can perform the same computations, so physically
different kinds of brains or brain states can realize the same
psychological states. Functionalists are quick to point out that they
are not denying materialism (or physicalism). They need not believe
in the existence of anything but entities of the kind mentioned by
the basic laws of physics. They admit that functionally defined
states <i>are </i>identical to the physically defined states that
realize them in each specific case. The agree that if a physical
system of some kind realizes a functional system, then another
physical system of the same (relevant) kind must also realize it. But
they believe that there is only a token-token identity between
functional and physical properties. They deny there is any necessary
connections between the types of these tokens, because they believe
that indefinitely many different kinds of physical systems can
realize a functional system. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Second,
the very form of functionalist psychology precludes any explanation
of intentional states in terms of representations of the world.
Psychological states are ordinarily classified not only by the
propositional attitudes involved (that is, depending on whether they
function as beliefs, desires, intentions or the like), but also
according to content (or what they are about, beliefs <i>about water</i>,
say, being different from beliefs <i>about alcohol</i>). Though the
former kinds are plausibly explained by their casual role in
mediating between input and output, the latter cannot be, for any
correspondence to objects/states in the world would lie outside the
functional system. The only way of distinguishing psychological
states according to their content within the functional system is by
differences in the representations themselves, that is, by the
so-called formal aspects of the states (which are analogous to
syntax, as opposed to semantics, in linguistic analysis). They have,
in the jargon of this field, &quot;narrow content,” but not &quot;wide
content.” They cannot have a content that depends on a relationship
to objects/states in the rest of the world, because the only
relationship of the system's internal states to the rest of the world
is by way of its input and output, and functional theories abstract
from how input and output connect to the rest of the world. Thus,
since functionalist theory cannot connect the mind with real
objects/states in the world, it cannot explain the intentionality of
psychological states — that is, explain <i>how </i>and <i>why </i>they
are <i>about </i>the world. It cannot, for example, say which beliefs
are true. It cannot even explain what makes true beliefs true.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
leading proponent of functionalism, Jerry Fodor, argues that these
two points are connected. He argues that psychology cannot explain
psychological states by how physical states correspond to
objects/states in the rest of the world, because functionally
described states supervene on physically described states and the
physical states on which they supervene are <i>in </i>the brain. This
doctrine he calls &quot;individualism.”<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote24anc" href="#sdendnote24sym"><sup>xxiv</sup></a></sup>
</font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Fodor
does not, of course, deny that the internal states of functional
systems do sometimes refer to objects/states in the world. But he
proposes to account for the &quot;wide-content&quot; of our ordinary
psychological explanations by supplementing his functionalist theory
of mind with a &quot;causal theory of reference.” The referents
would be picked out as certain more or less remote causes of input to
the functional system that are regularly related to the internal
states. That is supposed to account for the intentionality of
psychological states, but even Fodor recognizes that such a causal
theory of reference has trouble accounting for some kinds of
references.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote25anc" href="#sdendnote25sym"><sup>xxv</sup></a></sup>
And there are more basic philosophical objections to such a theory,
which Fodor does not acknowledge.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote26anc" href="#sdendnote26sym"><sup>xxvi</sup></a></sup>
However, neither class of problems is relevant here. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">For
our purposes, the problem is that, if the intentional content of
psychological states can be explained only by <i>tacking </i>a causal
theory of reference <i>onto </i>a functionalist theory, then far from
explaining intentional states in terms of the ontology of naturalism,
functionalist psychology actually makes intentionality more puzzling.
Even if all the references we take psychological states to be making
did turn out to have causal relations to the world, it would show, at
most, that there is an objective regularity about our ascriptions of
references to psychological states. But it would not explain why
psychological states are about the world. need to tack a causal
theory of reference onto a functionalist theory of mind would still
suggest that the intentionality of psychological states is something
accidental. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">What
Fodors functionalism is leaving out can be seen with the help of
our ontological explanation of the function of the animal behavior
guidance system. Because animals acquire their free energy by
ingesting other objects in space, they need, in addition to their
biological behavior guidance system, a system to guide behavior that
acts on other objects in space. Thus, animal behavior is different
from biological behavior, because it must direct behavior at other
objects in space, rather than just at the world as a whole (or merely
oriented in a gravitational or electromagnetic field). Thus, what
makes animal behavior guidance systems more powerful is the evolution
of a subsystem, the animal system of representation, which uses an
interaction between sensory input and behavioral output to represent
the objects toward which its behavior is directed. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Behavior
is generated by the structure of the organism as an irreversible
structural global regularity, but as animal behavior, it can make
events occur regularly in its territory that are otherwise quite
improbable only by acting other objects in the region. That is, what
coincides with the geometrical structures of regions
thermo&shy;dynamics flow of matter toward evenly distributed heat to
do work is not an unchanging material structure, like a region-wide
machine, but rather animal behavior, that is, behavior in which,
typically, the animal moves around in the region and acts on other
objects (as in chasing prey and ingesting them). But that requires
animal behavior to be guided in relation to objects in space, and
thus, a system evolves in the animal behavior guidance system to
represent the object, or what we have called the animal system of
representation. The animal stages of evolution are all increases in
animal power that comes from the animal system of representation
representing the nature of the world in which its behavior must act
more completely. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
animal system of representation evolves first in telesensory animals.
(The somatosensory animal has only an implicit representation of the
object, because it uses the location of the sensory input in the body
to locate the object for purposes of directing behavior at it, for
example, as the hydras tentacles sting prey that touch it and
contract to draw the prey into its gastrovascular cavity.)
Embryological development constructs a nervous system in telesensory
animals that uses the regular changes in sensory input as a function
of behavioral output to represent the object in such a way that it
can guide locomotion in relation to the object. The function of this
brain structure depends on how the animal interact with other objects
in space, and that is the basis of the relationship of representation
between the states of the animal system of representation and the
objects in space. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Functionalism
abstracts from this functional explanation. To insist that such
internal states be defined strictly in terms of the internal causal
relations by which they mediate between sensory input and behavioral
output is to cut off from consideration all the structural effects
outside the body that are involved in doing the non-reproductive work
of controlling relevant conditions. The culprit here is the computer
analogy, and there are two ways in which it cuts psychological states
off from any deeper explanation. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">First,
on the computer model, the only context that is relevant in a
functional system is the input to the system and its output, and
thus, functionalism abstracts from the part of the structural effects
outside the organism. That cuts the animal behavior guidance system
off from any coincidence with the thermo&shy;dynamic flow outside the
organism, including any relevant conditions the behavior it is
generating might be controlling.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote27anc" href="#sdendnote27sym"><sup>xxvii</sup></a></sup>
</font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Second,
on the computer model, the internal states of a functional system are
defined only in terms of the causal relations among them that are
responsible for mediating between input and output, and thus,
functionalism also abstracts from the structural global regularities
that occur within the animal behavior guidance system. When
functionalists abstract from the &quot;physical realization&quot; of
the functional system, they are abstracting from the material
structures that channel the flow of free energy in the animal
behavior guidance system. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">This
abstraction is necessary, functionalists would insist, because there
are different kinds of structural causes that could generate the same
kind of structured thermodynamic order. That may be true of
computers, but it is not true of biological mechanisms, because in
products of reproductive causation, there is a necessary connection
between functions and traits. The kind of structural effects that
serve any function are determined by that function, because they are
the most powerful way of controlling that relevant condition that is
possible for organisms of their kind when they evolved. That
necessary connection makes a type-type reduction to naturalist
ontology possible. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Both
kinds of abstraction are appropriate for computers, because their
input and output is strictly linguistic (or digital), and many
different machines can be built that manipulate the syntax of
linguistic or mathematical representations. But animal behavior
guidance systems are structural causes that have evolved by
reproductive causation to guide behavior in a world of objects in
space, not just syntax manipulators designed by human ingenuity to
work in a linguistic environment. Given our definition of
&quot;functions,” therefore, neither kind of abstraction —
neither from the objects in space outside the brain nor from the
physical nature of the brain itself — is appropriate. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><b>Functional
explanations of intentional states.</b> This brings us to the other
received theory of the intentional content of psychological states,
the one that would <i>explain </i>representations by their function,
rather than just describe them by their causal roles as internal
states in a functionalist system. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Ruth
Millikan (1989, p 282) rightly challenges Fodor's assumption that the
status of an inner state &quot;<i>as</i> a representation is
determined by the functional organization of the part of the system
that uses it,” pointing out that there is no such a thing &quot;as
behaving as a representation without behaving like a representation
of anything in particular.” The relationship to objects/states in
the world is essential, she insists, to any explanation of
intentional states in terms of representations. She is also correct
to insist that such a system can be <i>explained </i>functionally,
and not merely <i>described </i>functionally. But her theory fails to
reduce psychological states to naturalist ontology, because she
accepts a theory of functional explanations, the &quot;etiological
theory,” that takes accidentalism for granted. And as a result, she
overlooks an essential ingredient in any adequate explanation of the
nature of psychological states.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Let
us call Millikan's kind of explanation the &quot;teleological theory&quot;
of representations. It holds that what makes an inner state a
representation is that its function is to represent.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote28anc" href="#sdendnote28sym"><sup>xxviii</sup></a></sup>
According to the etiological analysis, representations are states of
an organism that correspond to certain objects/states of the world
and that were selected to be parts of the organism <i>because they
correspond </i>to those objects/states in the world. That makes the
correspondence part of the explanation of the intentional state
something more than what happens to be true of it or what we read
into it, because the state's correspondence to the world is
responsible for the organism having been able to do something that
was (and perhaps still is) required for its success in reproduction. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">There
are, for example, bacteria that use tiny magnets (magnetosomes) to
guide their locomotion. What they represent is not, however, the
direction of magnetic north, which causes their orientation, but
rather the direction of oxygen-free water, because magnetosomes were
selected for their correspondence to oxygen-poor water. That
correspondence causes their reproductive success by enabling them to
avoid the toxic, oxygen-rich water near the surface, and thus, the
magnetosomes have the function of representing oxygen free water.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote29anc" href="#sdendnote29sym"><sup>xxix</sup></a></sup></font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
teleological theory of psychological states is closer than Fodor's
functionalism to the explanation entailed by this ontological
explanation of the course of evolution, because instead of tacking a
causal theory of reference onto a functional system, it gives a
functional explanation of the correspondence between inner
representations and objects/states in the world. But the teleological
theory of representations nevertheless agrees, in effect, with the
other abstraction involved in functionalism, for it still assumes
that there is no necessary connection between intentional states and
the physical states that realize them. The accidentalist assumptions
of the contemporary Darwinist explanation of about the course of
evolution lead to the etiological analysis of functional
explanations, and since that precludes explaining course of evolution
by the functions that are possible, it does not seem possible to
explaining psychological states ontologically. Both assumptions of
accidentalism are relevant. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">First,
though inner states of an animal may have the function of
representing something, what they represent is contingent. Since
natural selection is imposed by changes in the environment, what
inner states correspond to depends on environmental changes or
conditions that could be different. There may be a historical
explanation of the natural selection of intentional states, but since
what is represented is contingent, no ontological reduction of
psychological states is possible. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Furthermore,
even if the selection pressure responsible for psychological states
were given and the nature of the correspondence were determined,
psychological states would still not be reducible to the ontology of
naturalism, because the etiological theory has nothing to say about
the mechanisms that would serve that function. The kinds of inner
states and how they are made to have the required correspondence
would depend on which random variations happened to be available at
the time the selection pressure was imposed. Thus, the teleological
theory of representations does not offer an account of intentionality
that reduces psychological states to the ontology of naturalism. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
examples used to illustrate states with representational functions,
such as the magnetosomes in bacteria mentioned above, seem to confirm
accidentalism. Though they might guide some bacteria to oxygen free
water, they might guide other animals in seasonal migrations. But
such examples are misleading, because they implicitly assume that the
representational functions of inner states are tied directly to the
control of rather specific conditions. And this may be true in
somatosensory animals and simpler animals, since they do not have
animal systems of representation. And since the accidentalists
assumptions of contemporary Darwinism keep teleological theorists
from trying to trace the course of evolution, they do not notice that
the evolution of greater power in higher animals comes from serving a
more universal function in behavior guidance, namely, the
representation of objects for the purpose of adapting behavior to the
spatial aspects of the world. That is, they overlook the
inevitability of the evolution of the animal system of representation
in multicellular animals.<sup> <a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote30anc" href="#sdendnote30sym"><sup>xxx</sup></a></sup>
</font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
animal system of representation has a necessary neurological
structure in telesensory animals because of how behavioral output
must be combined with sensory input to locate objects in space for
purposes of guiding behavior. There are, of course, different ways of
serving this function, as we have seen, with the greatest differences
arising from the fundamental difference between proterostome and
deuterostome embryological development. But the inevitability of the
neurological structure of the system for representing the objects of
animal behavior at later stages of evolution, because they use higher
levels of neurological organization to represent additional aspects
of the spatial structure of the world. Spatio-temporal and
structuro-temporal imagination give the animal subject internal
states that correspond to the world in a way that does not depend on
the selection pressure that happen to have been imposed on the
animal. It evolves because evolution is progressive. In order for
animal to have more power to control relevant conditions, their
behavior guidance systems must have animal systems of representation
that represent objects as being located in space and as having
geometrical structures. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">These
forms of imagination in animals are the foundation, as we have seen,
for the evolution of naturalistic and subjectivistic imagination in
primates with the use of language. But those forms of imagination are
also inevitable, and they involve a correspondence between brain
states and the states in the world, including other subjects, that is
also necessary. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">This
solves a problem that functionalist explanations encounter when they
try to explain correspondence with nothing but causal connections
between input and output within the organism. The correspondence is
not just a constant conjunction between telesensory input and the
object in space that is involved in reference, as Fodor seems to mean
by calling it a casual connection, but an isomorphism between
geometrical structures in the brain and the geometrical structures of
the locations of objects in the space around the telesensory animal. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0; page-break-before: always">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font color="#993366"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif"><b>S<img src="data:image/png;base64,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" name="OdkC38" align="right" width="75" height="30" border="0">ocial
science. </b></font></font>The social sciences present yet another
problem about the nature of the causal connections involved in
scientific explanations. By “social sciences,” I mean the various
branches of science that attempt to understand human society, from
anthropology and sociology, which both claim to be the most basic
social science, to economics, political science and even history,
though the latter has reservations about calling itself a science at
all. The main issue about the nature of causation in these fields has
to do with whether explanations of social phenomena are reducible to
explanations of the individuals involved in social phenomena. It is
basically a dispute between individualism and holism, and what is at
issue is the essential nature of the object being studied by these
sciences. Whereas holism is the belief that a human society as a
whole is something more than the sum of its parts, individualism is
the belief that it is just all the individuals that make up society. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><b>Individualism.</b>
The roots of individualism go back to Thomas Hobbes and Adam Smith.
Max Weber stands out as a defender of individualism among advocates
of hermeneutical (or interpretive) social science. But in the
contemporary era, its main defenders have been F. A. von Hayek and
Karl Popper.<sup><a class="sdendnoteanc" name="sdendnote31anc" href="#sdendnote31sym"><sup>xxxi</sup></a></sup>
These philosophers call themselves &quot;methodological&quot;
individualists, because they think of individualism as principle
about how to practice social science. But it presupposes an
ontological position, because a science that follows that
methodological principle could not be expected to discover the truth,
unless the society were nothing but the behavior and interaction of
all its members in the natural world. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Methodological
individualist hold that all social phenomena can be explained, in
principle, as either the intended or unintended consequences of the
(mostly) rationally explicable behavior of the individuals involved
in the situations they face. Methodological individualism does not
have to take a stand on whether or not such rational explanations can
be reduced to explanations in natural science. Its main point is that
what makes social phenomena seem to be something more than what the
individuals do is that the consequences of all their actions as they
add up in space over time are largely unintended. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">More
recently, a form of individualism has been defended by
sociobiologists, at least, implicitly. They attempt to give an
evolutionary explanation of the social nature of human beings. Darwin
was the first naturalist to defend an evolutionary explanation of
human beings was (in his <i>Descent of Man</i>). But he was not an
individualist, because he recognized the role of group level
selection in human evolution, as well as individual level natural
selection. The most recent attempts to establish a science of human
society as a branch of evolutionary biology are due to Edward O.
Wilson (1975, Ch. 27; 1978; and, with Charles J. Lumsden, 1983). They
are individualists, because their project is to explain social
phenomena by natural selection working on the individual level. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><b>Holism.</b>
Contemporary defenders of holism about society believe that there are
irreducible laws about social phenomena. Prominent epistemological
philosophers of social science, such as Bhaskar (1979) and Manicas
(1987), believe that casual processes throughout nature are
stratified. They hold that there are irreducible laws not only at the
social level, but also at other levels of organization, such as
psychology, physiology, biology, and chemistry. They believe that
theories in social science must mention unobservable theoretical
entities, such as social structure, and as scientific realists, they
believe that those entities exist in some way that is not reducible
to the individuals and their behavior. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The roots
of social holism can be traced to theorists about human society in
the 19<sup>th</sup> Century. Among those classical defenders of
holism, there is a difference between those who took a basically
hermeneutical or interpretative approach to explaining individual
behavior and those who were naturalists about the explanation of
individual behavior (or psychology).</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
interpretationalists are represented by Herder and Hegel. Herder used
the notion of <i>Das Volk</i> as a way of pointing to the cultural
aspect of spiritual animals, but he thought of culture as expressing
the nature of society as an irreducible spiritual entity. Thinking of
himself as the founder of history, Herder saw human history as the
story of the transit though the natural world of a kind of spiritual
being whose nature could be understood only from the inside (that is,
through its culture). For Hegel, <i>Das Volk </i>became <i>Die
Volksgeist</i>, and ultimately the state, as part of his idealist
metaphysics. Hegel saw evolution and history as a dialectical
progress of the Idea in which it becomes aware of itself in the
natural world, and objective spirit was a later moment in that
process.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
naturalists who defended holism in the 19<sup>th</sup> Century
accepted the empirical method of science as the only valid way of
acquiring knowledge about the world, and thus, they understood holism
in terms of the social aspect of spiritual animals, rather than the
cultural aspect. They rejected individualism in favor of believing in
the existence of irreducible laws and/or entities on the social
level. August Comte, for example, thought of science as seeking to
discover basic laws of nature on each of several levels of phenomena,
including physiological explanations of individuals and laws of
social development. Though each branch of science went through a
predicable series of stages before it discovered the basic laws
(religious, metaphysical and positivist stages), the laws of higher
level strata of nature could not be explained in terms of the laws of
lower level strata. Emile Durkheim also thought of himself as a
naturalist, but his theories turned on the recognition of a
<i>conscience collective,</i> which seems to his detractors, at
least, as belief in a group mind, though it was probably only a way
of talking about the effect of the society, by way of its culture, on
the members.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
ontological critique of epistemological philosophy of social science
will show that individualism and holism are both true and both false.
Both are true, because social phenomena are the result of organisms
evolving at both the individual and social levels of biological
organization at once. And both are false, because each takes the
truth of what it is defending to deny the truth of what the other
side is defending. Because neither side in this dispute understands
the basic nature of the object investigated by the social sciences,
each is describing only an aspect of this phenomenon and trying to
parlay it into an explanation of the basic nature of society. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
nature of social phenomena has been explained by tracing the course
of evolution by reproductive causation from primates (manipulative
animals, at stage 7) through primitive and rational spiritual animals
(stages 8 and 9) to philosophical spiritual animals (at stage 10,
including the individualism-holism dispute). Since evolution is
explained as a global regularity, everything that evolves is reduced
ontologically to space and matter in a world like ours, including
spiritual animals. But that does not make the levels of biological
organization any less real. We have seen how levels of part-whole
complexity are responsible for stages of evolution. But the three
stages at which spiritual animals evolve are unique, because on them,
reproductive causation is a work on two levels of biological
organization at once. There are, in other words, organisms on both
the individual and the social levels of biological organization
imposing natural selection on themselves by their own reproduction in
space. Thus, at the same time that spiritual animals are changing
gradually in the direction of natural perfection for organisms
subject to the condition of being made up of language-using
multicellular animals as parts, the individuals are changing in the
direction of natural perfection for multicellular animals subject to
the condition of being parts of spiritual animals. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Since
this ontological theory about the essential nature of the object of
the social sciences has already been explained, I will invoke it here
it to sketch the ontological critique of individualism and holism in
social science. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif">O<img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAEgAAAAUBAMAAADcj2b4AAAAMFBMVEX////w8PnQ0O3AwOiwsOKgoNyQkNaAgNBwcMpgYMRQUL5AQLgwMLIgIKwQEKYAAJnhdqIwAAAA9UlEQVR4nGNgIAbw/ycIPgxSRbvfg1h/5t8Dkf//f4NK5f9BVhR8H8T6Xb8XSP78//8zVMr+J7Ki7f9Tje4/Nqqf8+3/jW//JxkCzZg/2fi//bf/wZrfii2c7kMU2f6qz/5dX/19ffbnf/af/9v/rv+/Zb/959/5/z6/z/pVD1EEFAWi6r/++p9/14MVFRUDFf0Pivn8v/o3QpEfUNF/j/7Pf/LBivS/gxT93wxXFHwfKLqpGKho4v3P/80S/5ck15slgaxzj4Ar2v3+/L/7f/fdvwcMgD//f9/5/+fc/d9335//8//2/T//7/27P1jjjghFxAAA6lc2vHz33zwAAAAASUVORK5CYII=" name="OdkC39" align="right" width="72" height="20" border="0">ntological
critique of methodological individualism.</font> What is true about
methodological individualism is that the behavior of the members of
spiritual animals can be explained rationally in the situations that
they face. There are no effects or influences of the spiritual animal
on its members that are not mediated by the rationally explicable
behavior and interaction of the individuals. That means that there
are no group minds nor irreducible spiritual substances that act on
rational subjects by means that they cannot observe and explain. But
that does not mean that social holism if false, because by means of
such transparent processes, the society as a whole has decisive
effects on the individuals. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><b>The
rational nature of the individuals.</b> The most basic effect of the
social level on the individuals is one that lies mainly in the past,
namely, the evolution of the spiritual animals of which they are
parts. It is the evolution of spiritual animals by group level
natural selection through warfare that has made the individuals
rational, for that is what explains the evolution of psychological
sentences, which enables them to reflect on their psychological
states as reasons (that is, as causes of their beliefs and behavior
that are represented as such causes as an essential part of the
mechanism by which they cause beliefs and behavior). </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Methodological
individualism takes the rationality of the individuals for granted
and tries to explain the society, including their economic
cooperation in civil society as well as government, as the result of
rational individuals acting in their individual self interest. At one
extreme, methodological individualists such as Hobbes explain society
itself as a contract among rational subjects. At the other extreme,
they admit that the historical origin of economic and political
institutions is basically the accumulation of the unintended
consequences of the rationally explicable behavior of many
individuals over many generations, and so they recommend a
conservative attitude about tampering with what has come to exist.
But in either case, the basic premise of their explanation — that
individuals are rational subjects — is simply taken for granted,
and that is to ignore the most basic effect of the social level
organism on the individuals, namely, the evolution of spiritual
animals at the social level of biological organization by imposing
natural selection on themselves through warfare. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Thus,
methodological individualism fails to recognize the basic way in
which holism is true: Society is not a construct of reason, but
rather, reason is an effect of the evolution of spiritual animals.
Reason does make it possible for individuals to act together in
pursuit of common goals. But the individuals have such a power only
because they already pursued common goals before reason evolved, that
is, at the primitive stage, when they had only the use of natural
sentences and social level behavior depended on a leader to assign
tasks to individuals. Furthermore, contracts are just one way in
which rational beings are able to act jointly in pursuit of common
goals. Institutions themselves are ways of generating social level
behavior for the control of relevant conditions on the social level
that usually do not depend on contract.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Sociobiology
defends a more radical kind of individualism, because it does not
recognize much of a role, if any, for reason in guiding behavior.
Instead, it proposes to explain individual behavior by the evolution
of genes in individuals that disposes them to pursue certain goals,
including to learn certain rules (or “epigenetic rules,” as
Wilson calls them). </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Their best
example of such genes are attitudes toward incest, such as the way in
which children raised together tend not to find one another sexually
attractive at puberty. But sociobiologists suggest that there are
similar genes for warfare, religion, male domination of women, as
well as the disposition to learn certain skills and rules. And the
cooperation among individuals is explained as a result of the
evolution of altruistic genes as a result of what they call “kin
selection.” Wilson (1975, pp. 563-564), for example, insists that
ethics “reduces” to inherited emotions, and he betrays little
doubt about his denail of a universal moral standard.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Though
sociobiology is on the right track in looking for an evolutionary
explanation of human society, their project is crippled by the
accidentalism of contemporary Darwinism and its failure to recognize
that levels of part-whole complexity in evolving organisms cause
stages of evolution. The basic defects are its inability to explain
why the evolution of language is inevitable and its failure to
recognize the role of reason comes to play in guiding their behavior.
Thus, sociobiology is rightly dismissed as “reductionism” in the
pejorative sense, of debunking belief in the phenomena to be
explained by arguing that what seems to be irreducible is not real in
the first place. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
inadequacy of sociobiologys way of explaining evolution can been
seen in its attempt to reduce cultural evolution to biological
evolution. Sociobiologists take human culture to be continuous with
primate culture, and they explain both the diversity of cultures and
why culture can change so much more quickly than biological evolution
by the increased reliance on rule-governed behavior. That change is
supposed to have given humans more power to change their environment
than other animals. But Wilson (1975, p. 574) explains the rapidity
of the “social evolution” that has given humans this power by
postulating a “motor” that responds “more to internal
reorganization” in society and “less on direct responses to
features in the surrounding environment.” When challenged to
explain what he means, he and Lumsden (1983) offered their theory of
“gene-culture co-evolution,” in which culture is not only shaped
by genes, but the culture that develops from those “epigenetic
rules” also imposes a natural selection on genes. The rapid change
is apparently supposed to come from a positive feedback between genes
and culture. But if that is all there is to it, there is nothing to
guide the co-evolution in one direction rather than another. Hence,
it would be surprising if it made humans more powerful. The theory of
gene-culture co-evolution is the accidentalist theory of evolution
taken to the extreme, for the direction of evolutionary change,
having been freed even of having to track changes in an external
environment, can take off in any direction. It apparently just
happened to take off in the direction of technological control. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">The
rationality of the individuals is an effect of the social level on
the parts in the long past, however, and so we can set aside those
earlier stages in human evolution and assume, as methodological
individualists do, that the individual are rational. But even when we
start with individuals as rational subjects, there are other ways in
which the spiritual animal affects its members that also go
unrecognized by methodological individualism. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><b>Cultural
evolution.</b> One way in which the social level organism affects the
individuals as rational subjects is by way of cultural evolution. The
individual internalizes the culture of his spiritual animal as a
normal part of his development after birth, including not only the
language and the capacity to generate arguments (that is, the
evolution of behavioral schemata in rational imagination), but also
the arguments and conclusions that have accumulated as the culture
(that is, all the belief based on the mammalian map of its territory
as a way of representing the whole world, including rational subjects
who have bodies). That indebtedness to earlier generations is
recognized, of course, by methodological individualists, but what
they do not see so clearly is that the exchange of arguments,
including the education of new members into the culture, is a form of
evolution by reproductive causation that has been contained within
the spiritual animal for many generations. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Individualists
tend to assume that contributions to culture come from individual
geniuses who bestow their insights on the rest of us. But that is
merely to focus on the random variations rather than the natural
selection. The random variations that can be tried out depend on the
point that has been reached in the gradual evolutionary change toward
natural perfection at any stage, for it is just a recombination of
already evolved structures, and thus, it is inevitable in a large
enough population, if it is possible at all. But it becomes part of
the culture only because others judge that accepting such arguments
gives them a more coherent world view, often including a more
coherent set of general intentions (or values). That is, the culture
evolves by the rational selection of arguments by the individual
rational subjects in the spiritual animal, and that is a social level
process. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Cultural
evolution is an effect of the social level on the individual, because
it is a change that depends on the spiritual animal also having a
social aspect. The social aspect is a structure of the spiritual
animal as a whole, the aspect that has to do with how the members are
related and interact as objects in space. At a minimum, they are in
continual linguistic interaction, and in rational spiritual animals,
that means that arguments are evolving by rational selection. But the
culture is also an aspect of the spiritual animal. Though culture is
potentially complete in each individual brain (when it has mastery of
all the arguments that have accumulated), the culture is a structure
of the spiritual animal as a whole, because it also exists in the
brains of all the other members and it is exchanged by linguistic
interactions. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The social
whole has, therefore, an effect on the part, because the continual
linguistic interaction among members of a rational spiritual animal
is a contained form of reproductive causation in which culture
evolves in the direction of discovering the true, the good and the
beautiful. But methodological individualists have no need to deny
this kind of holism, because it does not compromise the autonomy of
the individual. Cultural evolution does not require anything to be
true of the social whole that cannot be explained individualistically
except the basic fact that the rational individuals are in continual
linguistic interaction as parts of a spiritual animal (and we have
seen how that is explained by reproductive causation). </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><b>The
invisible hand. </b>Methodological individualists point to the market
as their prime example of how the rationally explicable behavior of
many individuals in the situations they face has consequences that
none of them may intend. But even this phenomenon depends on a kind
of holism that they do not recognize.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Adam Smith
is an individualist hero because he showed how the tendency to “truck
and barter” leads to a division of labor which makes the production
of goods more efficient. Though each individual is pursuing his own
self interest, the result of their market interactions is an economic
system from which they all benefit. That is the prime example of the
“invisible hand” at work </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">What
methodological individualism overlooks, however, is how the market
system is a form of class structure, that is, a later stage in the
evolution of the social aspect of spiritual animals. As we have seen,
there is an inevitable series of stages of social evolution, from
nomadic bands through agricultural villages to civilized societies,
which are based on a class structure, such as feudalism or slavery.
Agriculture introduces the institution of the private ownership of
land and other property. Class structure evolves because random
variations in the institution of property that give one group of
members power over another make it possible to coordinate the
behavior of many more members, and since the increased population
gives civilized societies an advantage in war, they tend to be
naturally selected. It is possible for capitalism to evolve from
feudalism in philosophical spiritual animal, because as we has seen,
they have a culture that expects rules of morality and justice to be
justified on basic principle that recognize the rational autonomy of
individuals and they can have a natural science that can develop
techniques for controlling what happens by using mathematics to see
beneath the observable surface of physical processes.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Capitalism
involves, as we have seen, a class relation. There is a basic
difference between the role of the capitalist and the worker in the
process of production. The worker sells his labor power on the market
for a wage, while the capitalist buys labor power and other capital
goods to produce commodities for sale on the market and takes the
profit. To be sure, it is a class relation that is quite different
from feudalism, because the social roles are not necessarily
inherited. Besides mobility between the classes, it is possible for
the capitalist class relation to evolve into a more abstract form, in
which everyone, or nearly everyone, plays both roles, as capitalist
and worker. But the class structure is still essential, because it is
the mechanism that puts some members in a position of power over
other members so that the behavior of many individual can be
coordinated to carry out the productive activity of the spiritual
animal. .</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Methodological
individualism does not recognize class structure as a basic trait of
spiritual animals. They see only the individuals, each owning
different kinds of property, exchanging them on the market. But that
is just how the institution of property is used to sustain the class
relation in a capitalist society. There must be some members, at
least, with sufficient money to start up processes of production, and
there must be other members who are willing to sell their labor power
for a wage. Historically, these roles come from individual owning
different quantities of property, and that is sufficient to serve the
function of a class structure. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><b>The
work of the invisible hand. </b>A consequence of failing to recognize
that the invisible hand of the market is actually a form of the class
relation by which large civilized societies are possible is that
methodological individualists also fail to recognize its long term
effect. Adam Smith argued that market exchanges make production more
efficient by leading to a division of labor. But the more important
effect of the market in the long run is the way in which capitalism
is a contained form of evolution by reproductive causation.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">We have
seen how the competition among capitalists for a profit involves
capitalist selection. What evolves are the processes of production.
They reproduce in time as capitalists reinvest in them for another
period, and they reproduce in space as well when capitalists invest
in new processes of production. But there is a limit on the processes
of production that can go through such reproductive cycles, because
the commodities must be sold on a finite market, and those producers
that offer better commodities at lower prices are the ones who
succeed in selling their commodities and, thus, make a profit. It is
not just chance which processes of production continue to go through
reproductive cycles, because capitalists prefer to make a profit, and
they will invest only in production processes that do. Thus, the
efficient production of commodities is the non-reproductive work, and
since reproduction is by investment in production processes, there is
gradual evolution by capitalist selection. There is change gradually
in the direction of natural perfection for production processes of
their kind, that is, in which commodities are produced as efficiently
as possible -- or as Marxians would say, with the least labor time. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">As in
biological evolution, however, there is also a change at the
ecological level. As reproducing organisms (production processes) are
changing in the direction of increasing power to control all the
conditions that affect their reproduction, the organisms in the
region of space tend to diversity to tap all the sources of free
energy (to supply all the commodities that people will buy at the
price that they must charge to make an average profit). Thus,
although production processes start out simple, uniform and not very
efficient, they gradually become more complex, more diverse and more
efficient. The increase in diversity means that technology, made
possible by natural science, is continually being used not only to
make the same products more efficiently, but also to produce new and
better commodities.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Capitalist
evolution is an form of reproductive causation that is contained
within spiritual animals, and thus, it is a social level process, or
an effect of the spiritual animal as a whole on its members. This is
the longest range unintended consequence of the “invisible hand,”
but methodological individualism tends to overlook it, because they
think of the efficiency as an equilibrium toward which the market
economy tends. But far from being an equilibrium, it is an
evolutionary process, with the same creative powers of biological
evolution. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Methodological
individualism is basically correct in its insistence that nothing
happens in social processes except the rationally guided behavior and
interaction of the members. But its failure to recognize how
reproductive causation has shaped individuals to have capacities that
work together as a whole means that it overlooks ways in which such
individually explicable behavior has added up, and continues to add
up, in space over time to social level regularities that affect the
individuals. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 1.27cm; margin-right: 2.54cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt"><font face="Verdana, sans-serif">O<img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAACoAAAAUBAMAAAAJnbK1AAAAMFBMVEX////w8PnQ0O3AwOiwsOKgoNyQkNaAgNBwcMpgYMRQUL5AQLgwMLIgIKwQEKYAAJnhdqIwAAAAgElEQVR4nGNgwAr4/2OCDzQU/QOEQHDy/3lk0c9ACATb/89HFz1sBhTN/22s/zUo3Rgs+tHY+L/d9/Xb/9t/fv/+03+9b/thau1/1wNFfyv3A5nfEaI/5wNF///zRhGdUvweKPo13Q4uCnLZ3/3/3wJdthvIPP/3PS3DAZsoVgAAzVJMKhL8cO0AAAAASUVORK5CYII=" name="OdkC40" align="right" hspace="5" width="42" height="20" border="0">ntological
critique of social holism.</font> The truth of social holism is aso,
therefore, not quite what social holists have imagined. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Contemporary
social holists, like Manicas and Bhaskar, who believe that there are
irreducible social laws are correct in denying that social laws can
be reduced to the basic laws of physics. But that irreducibility
comes from not taking into account global regularities, namely, the
reproductive global regularities. Reproductive causation is the
source of all the ways in which ontological philosophy disagrees with
methodological individualism.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
evolution of spiritual animals that makes individuals rational is by
natural selection, or reproductive causation on the social level of
biological organization.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
evolution of culture is by the rational selection of arguments, or a
form of reproductive causation contained within spiritual animals.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
evolution of social structure, including capitalist class structure,
is by natural selection of spiritual animals, or reproductive
causation on the social level of biological organization.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">The
evolution of processes of production is by capitalist selection, or a
form of reproductive causation contained within spiritual animals. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">These
are regularities on the social level which social science is trying
to explain, and though they are not reducible to the laws of physics,
they are ontologically reducible. There is no reason to believe that
social laws will refer to unobservable theoretical entities that
cannot be explained as being constituted by space and matter as
substances enduring though time. </font></font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 2.54cm; margin-right: 1.27cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Ontological
philosophy must, however, deny traditional forms of social holism
that postulate entities that are not constituted by space and matter.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Thus,
ontological philosophy must deny the existence of Hegels <i>Geist</i>
and Herders <i>Das Volk,</i> if holists insist that spiritual
animals be explained as by the kinds of entities whose existence is
affirmed by epistemological philosophy. But the more interesting
aspect of this critique is that what Hegel and Herder were referring
to is spiritual animals. They portrayed spiritual animals as idealist
entities, because they recognized that they have a cultural aspect.
But ontological philosophy offers a more complete explanation of what
they were referring to by explaining the nature of spiritual animals
as a product of evolution by reproductive causation, that is, in
which spiritual animals have both a social and a cultural aspect. </font></font>
</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif">Ontological
philosophy must deny the positivism that made Comte so confident that
laws describing the behavior of societies would be irreducible. There
is a deeper explanation, and it is an explanation of the metaphysical
kind that Comte dismisses as the “metaphysical stage” preceding
positivism in the evolution of science. It is the ontological
explanation of evolution on the foundation of spatiomaterialism.</font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="3" style="font-size: 12pt">Finally,
the social holism of Durkheim must also be rejected, because there is
no irreducible tendency of the <i>conscience collective </i>to
generate institutions that increase social solidarity. The social
solidarity comes from the basic nature of the spiritual animal and,
thus, stems from its evolution. And the functionality of the
institutions of society is also explained by their capacity to
sustain populations that make them better able to win at war, though
it is as often mediated by the recognition of that advantage as it is
by actual natural selection by warfare. There is no direct,
irreducible connection between something contributing to social
solidarity and what individuals are constraned to do.</font></font></font></p>
<p lang="en-US" class="western" align="left" style="margin-left: 3.81cm; margin-right: 2.03cm; margin-top: 0.49cm; margin-bottom: 0.49cm; line-height: 100%; widows: 0; orphans: 0">
<br><br>
</p>
<div id="sdendnote1">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><font color="#000000"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote1sym" href="#sdendnote1anc">i</a>
Among other places, Hume uses the billiard ball example in Section
IV, Part I of <i>An Enquiy Concerning Human Understanding</i>. </font>
</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote2">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><font color="#000000"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote2sym" href="#sdendnote2anc">ii</a>
Although the notion of self-organizing systems comes from
thermodynamics, it has uses in biology, as is clear in Kauffman
(1993). </font>
</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote3">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><font color="#000000"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote3sym" href="#sdendnote3anc">iii</a><sup>
</sup>See for example, Manicas (1987).</font></p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote4">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><font color="#000000"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote4sym" href="#sdendnote4anc">iv</a><sup>
</sup>Mandelbaum (1971, pp. 20-28 and p. 291) discusses various
forms of monistic holism or emergentism, including Engels. Engels
denied the adequacy of reductionistic materialism in all branches of
natural science, not just history, claiming that the basic laws of
nature were not those of physics, but rather dialectical laws, in
which essentially novel phenomena arise from the &quot;contradictions&quot;
in established processes.</font></p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote5">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><font color="#000000"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote5sym" href="#sdendnote5anc">v</a>
For a popular exposition, see James Gleick, 1987.</font></p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote6">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote6sym" href="#sdendnote6anc">vi</a>
L. Sklar (1992) reviews these issues and gives references to the
literature in Chapter 3, “The Introduction of Probability into
Physics”. He puts the problem of reducing them to the basic laws
of physics as being unable to show that the probabilistic
assumptions of statistical mechanics are “nonautonomous” (p.
121). See also Sklar (1993)).
</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote7">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote7sym" href="#sdendnote7anc">vii</a>
Loschmidts paradox does not mean that Boltzmanns statistical
explanation of this tendency is falsified by observation, for it can
be held that the reason we never observe random systems
spontaneously becoming nonrandom is that the random microstates that
lead to nonrandom states are statistically so overwhelmingly
improbable that they virtually never occur in nature. And the reason
why we <i>do </i>observe many cases of nonrandom states becoming
random can be explained by the existence of other kinds of processes
in nature that impose nonrandom initial states on closed systems.
This bias in our sample of systems makes what is just an atemporal
statistical fact about such systems appear to be a tendency to
become more random over time.</p>
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote">This may save the appearances, but
it does not salvage Boltzmanns definition of randomness as an
explanation of the <i>tendency </i>to randomness. To be sure, there
are sources of usable, or “free”, energy in nature that can
impose nonrandom initial states on closed systems, and a more
general version of the second law of thermo&shy;dynamics would have
to cover the systems of which they are parts. These sources of free
energy include not only other systems with nonrandom distributions
of elasticly interacting objects, but also systems in which the
objects have potential energy because of forces they exert on one
another. But their existence does not explain the tendency to
randomness as a change with a direction in time. It only explains
why there are so many examples of that tendency in our surroundings.
There is still no reason to believe that systems that start off in a
nonrandom state will become random, except that most such systems
examined must be in a random state, if all possible microstates are
equally probable. At best, the existence of natural processes that
impose nonrandom initial states on closed systems will so bias our
sample that it will <i>appear </i>that change has a direction in
time. But that is no part of the statistical explanation of the
tendency to randomness, for if its statistics did take into account
the existence of such natural processes, it could not assume that
all possible microstates are equally probable.
</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote8">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote8sym" href="#sdendnote8anc">viii</a>
Attempts to show the equiprobability of all possible microstates
introduce another kind of phase space to represent the microstates
of the gas. The position and momentum of each molecule in a box can
be represented by six numbers, three each for its position and
momentum, and since the state of the whole box can be represented by
six numbers for each molecule, it is possible to think of the
microstate of the box as the location of a single point in a “space”
whose number of dimensions is six times the number of molecules.
This is misleadingly similar to the real, three dimensional space
from which it abstracts, for changes in the state of the box, which
actually depend on the molecules all moving and interacting in real
space according to the laws of physics, are represented as the
“motion” of this “phase point” in a “phase space” with
an enormous number of dimensions (the limits of the phase space
being determined by the total energy of the gas and the size of its
container). Although it can be shown that the phase point will <i>not
</i>move around to every point, it can be shown that it will
eventually spend the same amount of time in every small region of
this phase space. This theorem (the ergodic theorem) is used to
justify the assumption that all the points in phase space are
equally probable. But as long as it shows only that the phase point
will visit every <i>region </i>of phase space equally often, and not
every <i>point</i>, there is no good reason to believe that the
kinds of random microstates that would lead to non-random states
will ever occur, because there is no reason to believe that minor
differences in micro states will not add up to big differences, such
as not being non-random on the macro level. The importance of such
small differences is an example of the “butterfly effect” to
which chaos theorists have recently been drawing attention. See J.
Gleick, <i>Chaos: The Making of a New Science</i> (New York: Penguin
Books, 1987).</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote9">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote9sym" href="#sdendnote9anc">ix</a>
“Philosophy and Our Mental Life”, Putnam (1975, pp. 295-6).
Putnam (1978, pp. 42-3) calls it the “Laplacean super-minds
deduction”.</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote10">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote10sym" href="#sdendnote10anc">x</a>
For Putnam (1975, pp. 296-7), structural features are singled out
because of our interests, because of what is salient from our
special point of view, or because of the “pur&shy;poses for which
we use the notion of explanation”, rather than because of the role
of material structures in constituting global regularities about
change over time.</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote11">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote11sym" href="#sdendnote11anc">xi</a>
For many chemical interactions, the molecules must collide with
enough energy to distort one anothers geometrical structures so
that their parts are in a position to exert the forces that result
in exchanging parts of themselves with one another, and thus, the
likelihood of such reac&shy;tions depends on the mean kinetic energy
of their random motion and interaction, or tempera&shy;ture.
Although combustion does not start spontaneously, once it does
start, it can be self-sustaining. Once some molecules interact
energeti&shy;cally enough to form the stronger, lower-energy bonds,
they release enough energy to put other molecules in a position to
do the same.</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote12">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote12sym" href="#sdendnote12anc">xii</a>
Putnam also uses this argument elsewhere, for example, in Putnam
(1992, p. 62).</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote13">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote13sym" href="#sdendnote13anc">xiii</a>
Putnam, 1987, p. 11.</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote14">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote14sym" href="#sdendnote14anc">xiv</a>
See also Kauffman (1993, 1995).</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote15">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote15sym" href="#sdendnote15anc">xv</a>
The more elaborate examples in which one kind of chemical reaction
is followed by another in cycles can also be explained as global
regularities, for they are simply cases in which the free energy of
the thermo<font color="#000000">&shy;dynamic processes </font>to be
structured is supplied by the forces exerted by the molecules in the
region on one another and the chemical interactions are changing the
kinds of molecules that are present in the region.</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote16">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote16sym" href="#sdendnote16anc">xvi</a>
See Gleick (1987).</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote17">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote17sym" href="#sdendnote17anc">xvii</a>
John Post (1987) re-defines &quot;physicalism&quot; as a kind of
materialist ontology that rejects reductionism in favor of what are,
in effect, supervenient properties, and he goes so far as to take
that anti-reductionism as the main reason for accepting it.</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote18">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote18sym" href="#sdendnote18anc">xviii</a>A
good statement of the etiological theory is given by Larry Wright
(1973, 1976), but see also Michael Ruse (1973). For a criticism of
the etiological theory and a defense of what they call the
&quot;propensity theory&quot;, see Bigelow and Pargetter (1987).
Karen Neander (1991) defends the etiological theory against their
criticisms, but in a way that is not very convincing, at least, not
to me.
</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote19">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote19sym" href="#sdendnote19anc">xix</a>
Franz Brentano originally proposed intentionality as the distinctive
mark of the mental. He focused on what he called &quot;intentional
inexistence&quot;, by which he meant that a mental state could be
about something even if that something did not really exist. That
rules out explaining the content of a mental state as an actual
relationship to what it is about, but the content can be explained
by a theory that holds that particular representations are part of a
system. (Brentano did <i>not </i>require that <i>all </i>psychological
states are about things that do not exist). If there is a systematic
or normal relationship between representations of all types and
kinds of objects/states in the world, then tokens of those types can
stand for objects or states that do not exist.
</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote20">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote20sym" href="#sdendnote20anc">xx</a>
This is the position long defended by D. C. Dennett (1971, reprinted
in 1978). Not only does he take psychological states to be something
that we ascribe to objects from the &quot;intentional stance&quot;,
but he also takes functions to be something we ascribe from the
&quot;design stance&quot; and mechanisms to be something that we
ascribe from the &quot;physical stance&quot;. Dennett can be happy
with such a position, because he is still basically an
subjectivistic epistemologist, who is content to explain nature in
terms of our ways of knowing about it, rather than ontologically.
</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote21">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote21sym" href="#sdendnote21anc">xxi</a>
It does not help to say that there are no intentional psychological
states, only words and sentences that refer to the natural world,
because the same problem then arises about language. See the
discussion of the problems of cotemporary analytic philosophy in
Stage 10 on philosophical spiritual animals.
</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote22">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote22sym" href="#sdendnote22anc">xxii</a>
See Putnam's (1975) 1960's papers on psychology and Fodor (1975).</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote23">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote23sym" href="#sdendnote23anc">xxiii</a>
Fodor (1975) was among the first to distinguish token-token
reductions from type-type reductions.
</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote24">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote24sym" href="#sdendnote24anc">xxiv</a>
See &quot;Individualism and Supervenience&quot; in Fodor (1988) and
Fodor (1991).
</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote25">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote25sym" href="#sdendnote25anc">xxv</a>
Such a causal theory of reference is defended in Fodor 1988, Chapter
4.</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote26">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote26sym" href="#sdendnote26anc">xxvi</a>
For example, Putnam points out in &quot;Why There Isn't a Ready-Made
World&quot; (1983, pp. 205-228) and (1981) that the kind of causal
relation Fodor uses to explain references to objects/states cannot
be explained by internal realism in terms of materialism. See the
discussion of contemporary analytic philosophy in Stage 10.
</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote27">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote27sym" href="#sdendnote27anc">xxvii</a>
Fodor dismisses the possibility &quot;that brain states should be
relationally individuated&quot; as &quot;plain silly.&quot;</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote28">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote28sym" href="#sdendnote28anc">xxviii</a>
Millikan (1989, p. 283) holds that what is required to &quot;fly a
naturalist theory of content&quot; is an &quot;appeal to teleology&quot;
in which &quot;what makes a thing into an inner representation is,
near enough, that its function is to represent&quot;. Millikan uses
an etiological analysis of functional explanations, and I have
simplified her analysis somewhat, because we are interested only in
representations that were naturally selected in the course of
evolution. We will take up language in the next part. Van Gulick
(1980) is an earlier attempt to formulate a teleological theory of
representation.</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote29">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote29sym" href="#sdendnote29anc">xxix</a>
Millikan (1989, pp. 290-91) uses this example from Dretske (1990) to
illustrate her theory.</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote30">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote30sym" href="#sdendnote30anc">xxx</a>
In arguing against the causal theory of reference, Matthen (1988)
uses, in effect, the input function of a behavior guidance system to
illustrate functional explanations of the correspondence to external
conditions, but he focuses on representations of color rather than
the representations of objects in space on which such perception
depends.</p>
</div>
<div id="sdendnote31">
<p lang="en-US" class="sdendnote" style="margin-bottom: 0.25cm"><a class="sdendnotesym" name="sdendnote31sym" href="#sdendnote31anc">xxxi</a>
Methodological individualism was originally defended by Karl Popper
(1950, 1957), F. A. Hayek (1952), and J. W. N. Watkins (1952, 1955,
1958 and 1959). It has been criticized by Maurice Mandelbaum (1959),
and more recently by David-Hillel Ruben (1985) and Margaret Gilbert
(1989).
</p>
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