P
polytropos
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This post is directed at varieties of materialist philosophy of mind which hold that all mental activity in some way “supervenes” upon neural activity. What I am essentially arguing is that there is a lite interaction problem for materialists, the resolution of which necessitates the denial of free will.
Suppose I am sitting at my desk. I am thinking about a math problem. Eventually, I come up with the solution and reach for my pencil to write it down. Such an action seems voluntary. On a materialist account, can we maintain that it actually was voluntary?
I submit that we cannot.
We can begin our analysis at my action of reaching for the pencil, which is the simple part. My muscle movements were caused by the release of ions into my muscle cells, which was in turn caused by a series of action potentials stretching from my brain to my arm. What we are concerned with is what occurred in my brain.
I will define conceptual nexus to be the mental activity supervenient upon my brain. In other terms, as I am working through the conceptual content of the math problem, there is neural activity in my brain. This neural activity in some way represents the logical inferences that I am “making” in order to solve the problem.
What I take to be the materialist interaction problem is this: the conceptual nexus essentially constitutes our relevant conscious experiences. If the conceptual nexus “emerges” from the activity of the brain, then it is still wholly explained by the activity of the brain, and changes in the conceptual nexus must be accounted for in terms of specific neural activity. For instance, I decide that my current approach to the math problem is not promising, so I begin to think about another way of solving it. This seems conscious and voluntary, but must also be represented by neural activity. What seems to be the issue is that since the neural activity is primary, the conceptual nexus - ie. the conscious, voluntary experience - is not “acting” on the neural structure of the brain, which would seem to be necessary for genuine free will.
By materialist hypothesis, my mental activity is also fully represented by reductively neural activity. If physiological events require prior physiological events, then this would seem to remove free will from the materialist picture. The activity among my neurons must have been guided by the laws of physics; each event, by hypothesis, has an antecedent physiological cause, as opposed to an antecedent conceptual cause, since the conceptual nexus only supervenes on my neural activity and must be fully represented by neural activity. The logical inferences I make while solving my math problem, then must be reductively identified with some causal neural chain, however complex. The conceptual nexus does not cause my reasoning through the problem since it is conceptual and formally inert; the conceptual nexus represents my reasoning. The fact that the neural activity in some way represents mathematical logic cannot imply that I am actually making conceptual inferences, just that my conceptual inferences reflect reductively neural activity. We are left with an illusion of freedom, certainly, but not freedom. While the neural activity apparently leads me to believe that I freely chose to switch from one approach toward the problem to another, this was really the result of un-free neural activity.
Can the materialist evade this consequence by arguing that reality is indeterministic? It does not seem so. We still have a conceptual nexus supervenient upon particular brain states. Even with recourse to indeterminism, we are still left with the need for the logical inferences of the conceptual nexus to be represented by reductively neural activity. An appeal to stochastic laws could not save this picture. Even if we were to say that the decisions we make in solving a problem are not determined solely by prior physiological activity, indeterminism would just allow us to insist that the decisions are at the reductive level random, and this does not seem in any way to vindicate free will; rather than the solution deterministically emerging from a complex series of interactions between my neurons, some of the interactions were random, and the solution emerged anyway. This only seems to add a note of implausibility to the picture; that the “free” logical inferences I make in the course of solving a problem are in fact random does not seem to make them genuinely free.
As such, that mental activity is just supervenient upon neural activity seems to leave no room for free will.
If anyone disagrees with this characterization of materialist philosophy of mind, please say so. However, as I said, I do only mean for this to apply to varieties of materialism which hold that mental activity is supervenient upon neural activity; there are many varieties of materialism, and I do not expect this to apply to all of them (although more eliminative versions might deny free will outright anyway).
Suppose I am sitting at my desk. I am thinking about a math problem. Eventually, I come up with the solution and reach for my pencil to write it down. Such an action seems voluntary. On a materialist account, can we maintain that it actually was voluntary?
I submit that we cannot.
We can begin our analysis at my action of reaching for the pencil, which is the simple part. My muscle movements were caused by the release of ions into my muscle cells, which was in turn caused by a series of action potentials stretching from my brain to my arm. What we are concerned with is what occurred in my brain.
I will define conceptual nexus to be the mental activity supervenient upon my brain. In other terms, as I am working through the conceptual content of the math problem, there is neural activity in my brain. This neural activity in some way represents the logical inferences that I am “making” in order to solve the problem.
What I take to be the materialist interaction problem is this: the conceptual nexus essentially constitutes our relevant conscious experiences. If the conceptual nexus “emerges” from the activity of the brain, then it is still wholly explained by the activity of the brain, and changes in the conceptual nexus must be accounted for in terms of specific neural activity. For instance, I decide that my current approach to the math problem is not promising, so I begin to think about another way of solving it. This seems conscious and voluntary, but must also be represented by neural activity. What seems to be the issue is that since the neural activity is primary, the conceptual nexus - ie. the conscious, voluntary experience - is not “acting” on the neural structure of the brain, which would seem to be necessary for genuine free will.
By materialist hypothesis, my mental activity is also fully represented by reductively neural activity. If physiological events require prior physiological events, then this would seem to remove free will from the materialist picture. The activity among my neurons must have been guided by the laws of physics; each event, by hypothesis, has an antecedent physiological cause, as opposed to an antecedent conceptual cause, since the conceptual nexus only supervenes on my neural activity and must be fully represented by neural activity. The logical inferences I make while solving my math problem, then must be reductively identified with some causal neural chain, however complex. The conceptual nexus does not cause my reasoning through the problem since it is conceptual and formally inert; the conceptual nexus represents my reasoning. The fact that the neural activity in some way represents mathematical logic cannot imply that I am actually making conceptual inferences, just that my conceptual inferences reflect reductively neural activity. We are left with an illusion of freedom, certainly, but not freedom. While the neural activity apparently leads me to believe that I freely chose to switch from one approach toward the problem to another, this was really the result of un-free neural activity.
Can the materialist evade this consequence by arguing that reality is indeterministic? It does not seem so. We still have a conceptual nexus supervenient upon particular brain states. Even with recourse to indeterminism, we are still left with the need for the logical inferences of the conceptual nexus to be represented by reductively neural activity. An appeal to stochastic laws could not save this picture. Even if we were to say that the decisions we make in solving a problem are not determined solely by prior physiological activity, indeterminism would just allow us to insist that the decisions are at the reductive level random, and this does not seem in any way to vindicate free will; rather than the solution deterministically emerging from a complex series of interactions between my neurons, some of the interactions were random, and the solution emerged anyway. This only seems to add a note of implausibility to the picture; that the “free” logical inferences I make in the course of solving a problem are in fact random does not seem to make them genuinely free.
As such, that mental activity is just supervenient upon neural activity seems to leave no room for free will.
If anyone disagrees with this characterization of materialist philosophy of mind, please say so. However, as I said, I do only mean for this to apply to varieties of materialism which hold that mental activity is supervenient upon neural activity; there are many varieties of materialism, and I do not expect this to apply to all of them (although more eliminative versions might deny free will outright anyway).