Folk Psychology in Churchland’s Eliminative Materialism

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Folk Psychology in Churchland’s Eliminative Materialism

The mind-body problem has kept philosophers busy ever since Descartes proposed it in the sixteenth century. The central question posed by the mind-body problem is the relationship between what we call the body and what we call the mind—one private, abstract, and the origin of all thoughts; the other public, concrete, and the executor of the mind’s commands. Paul Churchland, a proponent of the eliminative materialist view, believes that the solution to the mind-body problem lies in eliminating the single concept that allows this problem to perpetuate—the folk psychological concept of mental states. Churchland argues that the best theory of mind is a materialistic one, not a folk psychological one. Unlike other materialist views such as identity theory, Churchland wants to remove the idea of mental states from our ontology because mental states cannot be matched 1:1 with corresponding physical states. This is why Churchland’s view is called eliminative materialism—it is a materialistic account of the mind that eliminates the necessity for us to concern ourselves with mental events. At first this eliminative materialism appears to be a good solution to the mind-body problem because we need not concern ourselves with that problem if we adopt Churchland’s view. However, there is a basic flaw in his argument that raises the question of whether we should actually give up folk psychology. In this paper, we will first walk through the premises of Churchland’s argument, and then we will explore whether Churchland does a suitable job of justifying our adoption of eliminative materialism.

The central point of eliminative materialism is that we should discard our idea of mental...

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...he many recent theories that have been raised, for example, against Einstein’s relativistic account of the universe, or even earlier attempts by natural philosophers like Ptolemy and Tycho Brahe to elucidate the structure of the universe. Many of these fringe theories have fallen over time; modern-day examples of fringe theories can be found simply by typing “antigravity” on any search engine on the Internet. By comparison to the long-standing theory of folk psychology, eliminative materialism is also a fringe theory. Perhaps eliminative materialism will also fall short of overthrowing folk psychology, but perhaps, Churchland is correct in saying that our “collective conceptual destiny lies substantially toward the revolutionary end of the spectrum” (Churchland 353). Only time will tell whether eliminative materialism will someday become our new account of the mind.

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