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Q_Goest
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Hi pftest,
Supervenience can be broken down into logical versus natural supervenience, but supervenience alone means the following:
For example, the pressure of a gas in a container supervenes on the temperature, number of molecules that make up the gas, and the volume of the container. The ideal gas law is used for illustration only; PV=nRT. So we can say the pressure supervenes on the physical state of the gas molecules. Without a change to the physical state of the gas molecules, we can’t get a change in the pressure. If we change one of the gas's properties, such as temperature, the pressure will also change. In this case, the pressure of the gas "naturally supervenes" on the physical state of the gas molecules. This relationship is given by the ideal gas law, PV=nRT. We might however, conceive of a world where the constant R is different and therefore, a mole of gas at a given temperature and in a given volume would have a pressure DIFFERENT than the pressure we know to exist. So the particular pressure of the gas we measure in our world “naturally supervenes” on the physical state according to our equation but it does not “logically supervene” since the value for R could conceivably be different in a different world.
(See Chalmers, “The Conscious Mind” pg 36)
For philosophy of mind, a physicalist would contend that the mind supervenes on the brain in some way. For the sake of illustration, we might consider a physicalist who would argue that the mind is a higher level phenomena created by the interaction of neurons in the brain. Therefore, the mind supervenes on both these interactions and on the neurons themselves. This is a supervenience relationship, and the physicalist would certainly argue this supervenicience relationship holds true.
Even if we accept however, that the mind naturally supervenes on the brain, we can't say it logically supervenes on the brain. Logical supervenience is a much more stringent requirement, and clearly p-zombies for example, are conceivable. Therefore, we don't generally suggest that the mind is logically supervenient on the brain. Natural supervenience is a subset of logical supervenience.
You jogged my memory... I remember talking about this now. I think what you're saying is that the supervenience relationship is conceptual in the sense that it depends on the individual who conceives of the relationship. Different individuals will have a different conceptual relationship so the supervenience relationship isn't consistent between individuals. Is that right?pftest said:I think we have talked about supervenience before, but I don't remember the outcome. My impression of supervenience is that a supervenience relationship is always conceptual. So when someone says that your mind supervenes on your brain, it actually translates to "some other mind conceptualises that your mind supervenes on your brain". So a supervenience relationship doesn't describe any kind of physical activity and this means that supervenience isn't a physicalist view of the mind body problem.
Supervenience can be broken down into logical versus natural supervenience, but supervenience alone means the following:
Ref: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physicalism#SupervenienceSupervenience is a concept with broad applicability throughout philosophy that has particular importance to physicalism. …
Supervenience can be seen as the relationship between a higher level and lower level of existence where the higher level is dependent on the lower level. One level supervenes on another when there can only be a change at the higher level if there is also a change at the lower level. (e.g., a set of properties A supervenes upon a set of properties B when there cannot be an A difference without a B difference). …
Supervenience establishes such a relationship between the mental and the physical, that any change in the mental is caused by a change in the physical. Just as a shadow is dependent upon the position of the object causing it, is the mental dependent upon the physical. Physicalism thus implies (through modal realism) that:
No two worlds could be identical in every physical respect yet differ in some other respect.The corresponding conclusion about the mental would be as follows:
No two beings, or things could be identical in every physical respect yet differ in some mental respect.
For example, the pressure of a gas in a container supervenes on the temperature, number of molecules that make up the gas, and the volume of the container. The ideal gas law is used for illustration only; PV=nRT. So we can say the pressure supervenes on the physical state of the gas molecules. Without a change to the physical state of the gas molecules, we can’t get a change in the pressure. If we change one of the gas's properties, such as temperature, the pressure will also change. In this case, the pressure of the gas "naturally supervenes" on the physical state of the gas molecules. This relationship is given by the ideal gas law, PV=nRT. We might however, conceive of a world where the constant R is different and therefore, a mole of gas at a given temperature and in a given volume would have a pressure DIFFERENT than the pressure we know to exist. So the particular pressure of the gas we measure in our world “naturally supervenes” on the physical state according to our equation but it does not “logically supervene” since the value for R could conceivably be different in a different world.
(See Chalmers, “The Conscious Mind” pg 36)
For philosophy of mind, a physicalist would contend that the mind supervenes on the brain in some way. For the sake of illustration, we might consider a physicalist who would argue that the mind is a higher level phenomena created by the interaction of neurons in the brain. Therefore, the mind supervenes on both these interactions and on the neurons themselves. This is a supervenience relationship, and the physicalist would certainly argue this supervenicience relationship holds true.
Even if we accept however, that the mind naturally supervenes on the brain, we can't say it logically supervenes on the brain. Logical supervenience is a much more stringent requirement, and clearly p-zombies for example, are conceivable. Therefore, we don't generally suggest that the mind is logically supervenient on the brain. Natural supervenience is a subset of logical supervenience.