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In Panpsychism in the West, the first comprehensive study of the subject, David Skrbina argues for the importance of panpsychism -- the theory that mind exists, in some form, in all living and nonliving things -- in consideration of the nature of consciousness and mind. Panpsychism, with its conception of mind as a general phenomenon of nature, uniquely links being and mind. More than a theory of mind, it is a meta-theory -- a statement about theories of mind rather than a theory in itself. Panpsychism can parallel almost every current theory of mind; it simply holds that, no matter how one conceives of mind, such mind applies to all things. After a brief discussion of general issues surrounding philosophy of mind, Skrbina examines the panpsychist views of philosophers from the pre-Socratics to the post-structuralists.
The original edition of Panpsychism in the West helped to reinvigorate a neglected and important aspect of philosophic thinking. This revised edition offers expanded and updated material that reflects the growth of panpsychism as a subdiscipline. It covers the problem of emergence of mind from a non-mental reality and the combination problem in greater detail. It offers expanded coverage of the pre-Socratics and Plato; a new section on Augustine; expanded discussions of Continental panpsychism, scientific arguments, Nietzsche, and Whitehead; and a new section on Russellian monism. With this edition, Panpsychism in the West will be continue to be the standard work on the topic.
384 pages, Kindle Edition
First published May 1, 2005
Every structured being in the universe – animals, plants, rocks, planets, stars – all, at some point, did not exist; now they do; therefore they did emerge. But not everything can plausibly do so. Time, for instance, seems inconceivable to have ever emerged from a timeless cosmos. So too with space; we simply cannot conceive how spatiality could have come into being in a universe that was not spatial. Time and space must have always existed, everywhere. They are “pan” qualities of reality. … Panpsychists add one more item to the list: mind. Experientially, subjectivity, qualia … the emergence of such things is inconceivable, from a universe utterly without them. … Panpsychists prefer a rational, naturalistic, and non-miraculous universe. And in such a universe, mind must have always been present. (p. 19)
Among the most notorious of these [atheist or near-atheist] philosophers was Julien LaMettrie (1709-1751). Author of the provocative and scandalous L’Homme Machine [The Human Machine], LaMettrie was the first thinker to unabashedly—though anonymously—claim that man was purely a natural automaton and did not require an immortal soul to account for his behavior. … In openly denying the immaterial soul, he carried scientific philosophy to its logical limit. ...
It is quite common, even today, to equate materialism with mechanism. But, as has been noted, the two are logically independent. … Though he obviously adopted the term “machine” in his L’Homme Machine, it was in a specifically vitalistic sense. LaMettrie’s writing demonstrated that he had quasi-panpsychist and hylozoist inclinations, which necessarily have no role in a mechanistic materialism. Vitalistic materialism sees some degree of life and mind in all things; it seeks a natural rather than a supernatural explanation. (pp. 122-123)
The best-known and most controversial panpsychist of the twentieth century was Alfred North Whitehead (1861-1947). The nominal founder of process philosophy, Whitehead took the insights of Heraclitus, Bergson, James, and Russell and combined them with the revelations of the so-called new physics of the day to create an intricate and complex philosophical system. Process philosophy saw time as a fundamental ontological entity, something deeply implicated in the nature of being. … On this view, the event is the fundamental reality of the world. (p. 213)