ABSTRACT

This book celebrates the research career of Lynne Rudder Baker by presenting sixteen new and critical essays from admiring students, colleagues, interlocutors, and friends. Baker was a trenchant critic of physicalist conceptions of the universe. She was a staunch defender of a kind of practical realism, what she sometimes called a metaphysics of everyday life. It was this general “common sense” philosophical outlook that underwrote her famous constitution view of reality. Whereas most of her contemporaries were in general given to metaphysical reductionism and eliminativism, Baker was unapologetic and philosophically deft in her defense of ontological pluralism. The essays in this book engage with all aspects of her unique and influential work: practical realism about the mind; the constitution view of human persons; the first-person perspective; and God, Christianity, and naturalism.

Common Sense Metaphysics will be of interest to scholars of Baker’s work, as well as scholars and advanced students engaged in research on various topics in metaphysics, philosophy of mind, philosophy of language, and philosophy of religion.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

part I|82 pages

On Practical Realism about the Mind

chapter 1|26 pages

What Is a Concept? 1

chapter 4|18 pages

Saving Physicalism 1

part II|82 pages

On the Constitution View

chapter 7|21 pages

Unkind Persons

A Critique of Baker’s Constitution View

part III|78 pages

On the First-Person Perspective

chapter 9|17 pages

On Baker on the First Person

chapter 10|15 pages

The Missing Self

chapter 12|14 pages

Persons First Metaphysics

part IV|77 pages

On God, Christianity, and Naturalism