ABSTRACT

In an impassioned defence of the importance of our own thoughts, feelings and experiences, the renowned philosopher Mary Midgley shows that there’s much more to our selves than a jumble of brain cells. Exploring the remarkable gap that has opened up between our understanding of our sense of self and today’s science, Midgley argues powerfully and persuasively that the rich variety of our imaginative life cannot be contained in the narrow bounds of a highly puritanical materialism that simply equates brain and self.

Engaging with the work of prominent thinkers, Midgley investigates the source of our current attitudes to the self and reveals how ideas, traditions and myths have been twisted to fit in, seemingly naturally, with science’s current preoccupation with the physical and material. Midgley shows that the subjective sources of thought – our own experiences – are every bit as necessary in helping to explain the world as the objective ones such as brain cells.

Are You an Illusion? offers a salutary analysis of science’s claim to have done away with the self and a characteristic injection of common sense from one of our most respected philosophers into a debate increasingly in need of it.

This Routledge Classics edition includes a new Foreword by Stephen Cave.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

Are we losing ourselves?

chapter 1|11 pages

Changing relations to the cosmos

chapter 2|19 pages

Sciencephobia and its sources

chapter 3|9 pages

Transcendent numbers

Pythagoras and Plato

chapter 4|10 pages

What explanation is

chapter 5|7 pages

Why the idea of purpose won't go away

chapter 6|15 pages

Is sexual selection natural?

chapter 7|6 pages

The search for senselessness

chapter 8|11 pages

The beasts that perish

chapter 9|8 pages

Free will, not just free won't

chapter 10|15 pages

How divided selves live

chapter 11|8 pages

Hemispheres and holism

chapter 12|14 pages

The supernatural aspects of physics

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion

On being still here