Tuesday, August 3, 2010
Is Leibniz an idealist?
I continue to be surprised why Leibniz gets described as an idealist.
If Leibniz is an idealist, Dretske is committed to idealism, too, and that seems mistaken. Leibniz
thinks everything has soul, and every soul has perceptions, but not all the perceptions are conscious, and some souls have no conscious perceptions. As
far as I can tell, the claim that x has a soul with perceptions comes down to two
things: (a) x has a substantial form, and (b) x has representations.
Claim (a) holding for all x does not imply idealism: Aristotle surely does not count as an idealist. Claim (b)
holding for all objects x is something that Dretske is committed to, assuming that we, reasonably,
take having information to entail having representations (information surely represents; and on a Dretskean view it seems pretty easy to argue that everything that can be affected by something else carries information). We could take this to be an argument that Dretske is an idealist, but it is better to take it to be an argument that Leibniz is not.
Hi Alex. The question is vexed, and, I'm sure you know, widely disputed. But I think Leibniz's idealism has more to do with the claim that NOTHING BUT simple substances exist, and, in them, nothing but perception and appetite. That entails that if there are bodies, they are reducible to souls and their mental states, i.e., they are not mind-independent. That certainly gets him in the neighborhood of idealism! The debate, I think, is about whether he stays in this neighborhood throughout his career.
ReplyDelete@ Todd: Isn't that just panpsychism?
ReplyDeleteI wonder if there is any difference between idealism and panpsychism? The former says only minds exist. The latter that everything is a mind.
ReplyDeleteI guess I read L like this: monads are components of bodies. But what makes them spatiotemporal and joined into bodies is the mental stuff.
ReplyDeleteI see that panpsychism and idealism agree that, at bottom, nothing exists but minds and their contents. But panpsychism, I think, goes further. I understand it to be the doctrine that every body is, in some sense, ensouled or has a thought of its own. Reductionism about bodies can avoid this doctrine. One way would be to identify bodies not with a collection of thoughts (as Berkeley appears to do) but with the contents of thoughts. On such a reduction, bodies are like characters in the stories told by our (human) perceptions. This would be idealism, but not panpsychism. For the bodies themselves are thoughtless. For the record, I think this would be a fair characterization of Kantian idealism. Also for the record, I should mention Bob Adams's book, Leibniz: Determinist, Idealist, and Theist; the section on idealism is, I think, the starting point for scholarly debate about this issue.
ReplyDeleteTodd:
ReplyDeleteSuppose that there is a spiritual substance that doesn't think. Then panpsychism is false. So panpsychism cannot simply be the claim that all bodies think.
Maybe, then, panpsychism is the conjunctive claim: all genuine objects think, and all genuine bodies are objects?
But it just doesn't seem like the second conjunct is a part of panpsychism.
So, maybe, we should leave panpsychism as the claim that all things think (in a broad sense), but now define idealism as the claim that all bodies are reducible to thoughts.
But then anyone who thinks there are no bodies (in some sense, I think that's true--I do have a body, but I do not think this is to be analyzed by positing an entity, body, which I have) counts as an idealist.
Maybe, then, to be an idealist you have to both believe in bodies and believe they are reducible to thoughts?
If so, then on my reading Leibniz is not an idealist, because I think he thinks of the monads as components of the bodies, and since the monads are not reducible to thoughts, surely neither are the bodies of which they are parts.
Hi Alex. My question is Why does Pruss refer to the developing fetus as “Bob” and not “Alexander Pruss”?
ReplyDelete2- What are circumstances in which it may be acceptable to kill Alexander Pruss? 3- Why could these circumstances never apply to the fetus?
4. How does Pruss prove that abortion is wrong even
How does Pruss prove that abortion is wrong even if the mother did not intend to get pregnant?
I don't know why this is attached to this post. :-)
ReplyDelete1. Not to beg the question from the beginning, but to argue gradually that the developing fetus is me.
2. Self-defense against aggression, or a deserved death penalty in one of those very rare cases where the death penalty is justified.
3. A fetus isn't an aggressor or a criminal.
4. Whether someone's parents intended to conceive him or her seems quite irrelevant to whether it is permissible to kill him or her.