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Mind, Unspecified
- comment on Henry Stapp's Quantum Interactive Dualism -
The
difficulty with dualism has always been how to specify the interaction between
two putatively separate realms of existence, mind and body. Henry
Stapp's solution in "Quantum
Interactive Dualism", Journal of Consciousness Studies V12 #11,
2005, pp. 43-58 is to connect them via quantum theory, while keeping the mind
quite distinct from the brain. The problem, however, is that on Stapp's
account the mind itself remains unspecified
(like
the
intelligent designer, not
coincidentally)
except in terms of ordinary folk-psychological descriptions. Whatever it is,
the mind isn't the brain, but beyond that we're not told much about it.
In particular, on Stapp's account we need not ask what
determines the mind in its choices: "Thus the 'subjective' and 'objective'
aspects of the data are rationally tied together by quantum rules that
directly specify the causal effects of the subject's choices upon the
subject's brain, without any need to specify the physical antecedents of these
choices"; and: "in the quantum treatment the causal connection via the laws of
physics is not from the cause of conscious choice to the effects of that
choice, but rather directly from the conscious choice itself to its physical
effects" (p. 57 JCS, p. 17
pdf ). Why, one
wonders, do the causes of choice get such short shrift here? Whatever the
reason, for Stapp the mind is causally privileged over the physical brain: the
mind drives the brain, but is not itself driven by anything. This
renders the mind supernatural;
like god,
it gets to cause without being caused in turn. Any naturalistic account of a
phenomenon has to show its provenance in the natural world, and on Stapp's
account, the mind – variously described as consciousness, the
observer, the subject's choices, intention, mental
effort, William James' "spiritual force", etc. – has no provenance, at least
none that he discusses here. The reluctance to address the causes of mind
might be related to Stapp's desire to defend a contra-causal conception of
free will.
Stapp's discussion is ambivalent about physicalism. On
the one hand, he clearly intends to provide a scientifically defensible,
naturalistic account of consciousness and its role in choice, but on the other
he also says conscious choice transcends physical law. He wears his normal
science hat when he says: "Thus the whole range of science, from atomic
physics to mind-brain dynamics, is brought together in a single rationally
coherent theory of a world that is constituted not of classically conceived
matter, bound by principle of the causal closure of the physical, but rather
of mind and matter connected in the way specified by orthodox contemporary
physical theory." (p. 53 JCS, p. 12
pdf). But orthodox
physical theory, although it transcends the classical conception of
matter, obviously does not transcend the notion of physical law, the
description of which is its raison d'etre. So it can't also be the case, as
Stapp (donning his mysterian hat) says elsewhere that "This free choice made
by experimenters…is `free' in the sense that these choices are not determined
by anything in contemporary physical theory: they are fixed neither by any law
nor by any random variables that enter into the theory" (p. 47 JCS, p.
6
pdf). A rationally
coherent understanding of mind and matter based in physical theory would have
to show how the mind, as well as the brain, is a nomic (that is,
law-governed), not mysterious, process. But on Stapp's account there is
literally no accounting for choices.
Stapp thinks that explanations involving mental effort
or intention are better than merely brain-based explanations, since "the
quantum account conforms to specific laws of physics that tie mental events to
their causal consequences in the brain in a way that appears to conform to
relevant empirical data" (p. 55 JCS, p. 15
pdf). But unless
explanations involving mental effort and intention can state clearly where
these originate – what their causal antecedents are – then we really
haven't explained anything when it comes to human choice and behavior. Stapp
admits that "incentives lead to effort", but this suggests that mental effort
is caused; it belies his earlier assertion that choices aren't governed
by any law-like regularities, so he can't go too far down this path. Instead,
the intervening variable of categorically mental effort is left unaccounted
for, as it must be if we're trying to rescue contra-causal free will.
TWC
- originally posted to
JCS
Online, Dec 7, 2005
~ related pages at Naturalism.Org:
Free Will -
Consciousness
~ related
JCS articles on free will:
Hodgson's Black Box,
Fear
of Mechanism
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