ABSTRACT

Contemporary Materialism brings together the best recent work on materialism from many of our leading contemporary philosophers. This is the first comprehensive reader on the subject. The majority of philosophers and scientists today hold the view that all phenomena are physical, as a result materialism or 'physicalism' is now the dominant ontology in a wide range of fields. Surprisingly no single book, until now, has collected the key investigations into materialism, to reflect the impact it has had on current thinking in metaphysics, philosophy of mind and the theory of value. The classic papers in this collection chart contemporary problems, positions and themes in materialism. At the invitation of the editors, many of the papers have been specially up-dated for this collection: follow-on pieces written by the contributors enable them to appraise the original paper and assess developments since the work was first published. The book's selections are largely non-technical and accessible to advanced undergraduates. The editors have provided a useful general introduction, outlining and contextualising this central system of thought, as well as a topical bibliography. Contemporary Materialism will be vital reading for anyone concerned to discover the ideas underlying contemporary philosophy. David Armstrong, University of Sydney; Jerry Fodor, Rutgers University, New Jersey; Tim Crane, University College, London; D. H. Mellor, Univeristy of Cambridge; J.J.C.

chapter 1|6 pages

MATERIALISM VERSUS DUALISM

chapter 2|2 pages

NONREDUCTIVE MATERIALISM

chapter 3|5 pages

MATERIAUSM, NATURAUSM, AND EXPIANATION

chapter 4|17 pages

THE SELECTIONS

chapter |3 pages

ACKNOWLEDGMENT

chapter |1 pages

Part I Materialism and Naturalism

chapter 1|1 pages

NATURALISM

chapter 2|1 pages

MATERIALISM

chapter 3|1 pages

FIRST PHILOSOPHY

chapter |2 pages

REFERENCES

chapter 2|15 pages

Special Sciences

chapter |5 pages

POSTSCRIPT

chapter |1 pages

Part II Materialism and Mind

chapter 4|12 pages

Sensations and Brain Processes

chapter |3 pages

POSTSCRIPT

chapter 5|16 pages

Mental Events

chapter 6|11 pages

Philosophy and our Mental Life

chapter 7|17 pages

The Myth of Nonreductive Materialism

part |1 pages

POSTSCRIPT: EVALUATING OUR SELF CONCEPTION

chapter 1|1 pages

THE “FUNCTIONAL KINDS” OBJECTION

chapter 2|2 pages

THE “SELF-DEFEATING” OBJECTION

chapter 6|2 pages

CONCLUDING REMARKS

chapter 9|5 pages

What Mary Didn’t Know

chapter |6 pages

POSTSCRIPT

chapter |1 pages

Part III Materialism and Meaning

chapter 10|17 pages

Things and their Place in Theories

chapter |2 pages

POSTSCRIPT

chapter |1 pages

Part IV Materialism and Value

chapter 14|18 pages

The Scientific and the Ethical1

chapter 15|50 pages

How to be a Moral Realist

part |12 pages

POSTSCRIPT: MATERIALISM AND REALISM IN METAETHICS

chapter |2 pages

NOTES

chapter 16|15 pages

How to be an Ethical Antirealist