ABSTRACT

Since neither substance dualism nor idealism are viable, the only option left is some kind of physicalism, which claims that physical entities or parts thereof exhaust everything that is concrete, where a physical entity is an entity quantified over by physics (Hellman & Thompson 1975). Yet although every thing and every part of every thing is physical, disagreement whether every physical thing or part need have only physical properties remains. Those who claim that they must are reductive physicalists; those who think they need not are non-reductive physicalists. For reductive physicalists, conscious properties are reducible to some kind of physical, usually neural, property. For most non-reductive physicalists, conscious properties bear some other relation to physical properties that is weaker than identity but still substantial enough to warrant neuroscientific investigation. For other non-reductive physicalists, conscious properties do not bear any relation substantial enough to warrant neuroscientific investigation.