MetaphysicsMany of the problems of philosophy are of such broad relevance to human concerns, and so complex in their ramifications, that they are, in one form or another, perennially present. Though in the course of time they yield in part to philosophical inquiry, they may need to be rethought by each age in the light of its broader scientific knowledge and deepened ethical and religious experience. |
Contents
THREE | 3 |
Interactionism | 17 |
The Privacy of Psychological States | 30 |
Copyright | |
7 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
absurdity ACTION PHILOSOPHY answer assert becoming older behavior believe body brain Carl Hempel causal connection cause chapter conception consider course deliberate described determinism is true difficulties DOUBLE ASPECT THEORY dualist effects either/or epiphenomenalism everything example existence express fact false fatalism fatalist feel future given going happen hence human hypothalamus idea identity igniting impossible inner instance interval Joel Feinberg kind least less living logically Lucretius match matter means mental merely metaphysical metaphysicians mind or soul Monroe Beardsley motion nature necessary nervous system neuron never nothingness obvious occur one's Osmo Osmo's ovum past perfectly perhaps perish person philosophy physical object polarized possible problem pure becoming question reason receding Richard Taylor rubbed seems sense similar simply someone sometimes space spatial statement stones substances suppose surely sympathetic nervous system temporal theory things thought tion truth Virgil Aldrich volitions William Alston zygote