Dear Colleague,
below please find the details of September 2004 philosophy events at CEU.
Budapest Mind Society (BMS) events:
(The BMS has been founded and is currently managed by Hong Yu Wong
and Istvan Aranyosi)
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Inaugural lecture by
Professor Howard Robinson
CEU Department of Philosophy
September 17, 2004 (THIS FRIDAY)
CEU philosophy department's seminar room (Zrinyi ut. 14, room 412) at 2 pm
Abstract:
This talk might have either of two titles. It might be called 'The
knowledge argument and the conceivability of zombies' or, alternatively,
'Reduction, supervenience and the a priori sufficiency of the base'.
The common factor is the question of what kind of relation a physicalist
must think there to be between physical and mental states, and whether,
and in what way, he could accept the knowledge argument and still hold
on to his physicalism. I shall look at the issue of whether the base
should entail states that supervene on it (as Chalmers and Jackson 2001
claim) or whether the relation can be contingent. Those who defend the
latter view include Block and Stalnaker 1999, and Balog 1999, in their
respective Philosophical Review articles. I shall try also to bring out
what I take to be features common to the debates on different kinds of
physicalism.
Balog, K. 1999. Conceivability, possibility, and the mind-body
problem. Philosophical Review 108:497-528.
Block, N. & Stalnaker, R. 1999. Conceptual analysis, dualism, and the
explanatory gap. Philosophical Review 108:1-46.
Chalmers, D. J. & Frank Jackson. 2001. Conceptual Analysis and
Reductive Explanation. Philosophical Review 110:315-61.
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Second BMS meeting:
István Aranyosi
Philosophy, CEU
"Why Property Dualism drives me Out of My Mind"
September 22, 2004
CEU philosophy department's seminar room (Zrinyi ut. 14, room 412) at 5 pm
Abstract:
Property Dualism has become a more popular doctrine than substanve dualism. I will analyze
the coherence of the property dualist view about disembodiment, according to which the
conceivability of disembodiment can coexist with its impossibility. Since the argument for
such a view draws largely on Saul Kripke's idea of a posteriori necessity, I will also
appeal to it, but in order to show that such a view is incoherent. The puzzle that I find
can be solved only by rejecting property dualism and adopting either substance dualism or
a certain kind of materialism.
Chalmers, D. J. 2002. Does Conceivability Entail Possibility? In T. Gendler and J.
Hawthorne (eds.) Conceivability and Possibility. Oxford University Press, pp.145-200.
Kripke, S. 1972. Naming and Necessity. In D. Davidson and G. Harman, (eds.) Semantics of
Natural Language, Reidel, Dordrecht, pp. 253--355.
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CEU, "Work in Progress Seminar" lecture series:
István Aranyosi
Philosophy, CEU
"Concluding Dualism"
September 29, 2004
CEU philosophy department's seminar room (Zrinyi ut. 14, room 412) at 5 pm
Abstract:
The past twenty years or so of debate around the qualia based objection to materialism
have been focused exclusively on either defenses of materialism or of anti-materialism. In
this paper I want to inquire into what exactly the most important such anti-materialist
arguments have as their conclusion. I will not question the soundness of these arguments,
but will assume it. What I am interested in is what more can be said about their
conclusions, besides their being negations of materialism. I will analyze the conclusions
that follow from the premises of three qualia arguments, David Chalmers' zombie
argument (1996), Frank Jackson's knowledge argument (1982), and Stephen White's
property dualism argument (1986). I will formulate property dualism in what I think is its
most intuitive form, and will try to show that while certainly anti-materialistic, the
conclusions of the above mentioned arguments imply weaker kinds of property dualism than
the intuitive one. After that, I will offer an argument for property dualism whose
conclusion conforms to the intuitive understanding of property dualism. Finally, I will
offer a classification of property dualisms according to their closeness to the intuitive
and strongest version, a classification that has not been offered so far in the
literature, as a result of the exclusive focus on the materialism/antimaterialism issue,
which obscured and made philosophers fail to recognize more fine tuned distinctions within
the property dualist doctrine.
Chalmers, D. J. 1996. The Conscious Mind. In search of a Fundamental Theory, Oxford
University Press.
Horgan, T. and J. Tienson, 2001. Deconstructing new wave materialism. In B. Loewer and C.
Gillett (eds.), Physicalism and Its Discontents, Cambridge University Press, pp. 307-318.
Jackson, F. 1982. Epiphenomenal qualia, Philosophical Quarterly, 32: 127-136.
White, S. 1986 Curse of the Qualia, Synthese, 68, 333-368.
NOTE: paper available online at:
http://www.personal.ceu.hu/students/03/Istvan_Aranyosi/Concluding%20dualism…
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Everyone welcome!
With best wishes,
Istvan
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István A. Aranyosi
Department of Philosophy
Central European University
Zrinyi u. 14, 1051 Budapest, Hungary
Tel: +3(0)670-576-1081
Fax: (36-1) 327-3072
Homepage:
http://www.personal.ceu.hu/students/03/Istvan_Aranyosi/