Wednesday, September 11, 2024

One-thinker colocationism

Colocationists about human beings think that in my chair are two colocated entities: a human person and a human animal. Both of them are made of the same stuff, both of them exhibit the same physical movements, etc.

The standard argument against colocationism is the two thinkers argument. Higher animals, like chimpanzees and dogs, think. The brain of a human animal is more sophisticated than that of a chimpanzee or a dog, and hence human animals also have what it takes to think. Thus, they think. But human persons obviously think. So there are two thinkers in my chair, which is innately absurd, plus leads to some other difficulties.

If I were a colocationist, I think I would deny that any animals think. Instead, the same kind of duplication that happens in the human case happens for all the higher animals. In my chair there is a human animal and a person, and only the person thinks. In the doghouse, there is a dog and a “derson”. In the savanna, one may have a chimpanzee and a “chimperson”. The derson and the chimperson are not persons (the chimperson comes closer than the derson does), but all three think, while their colocated animals do not. We might even suppose that the person, the derson and chimperson are all members of some further kind, thinker.

Suppose one’s reason for accepting colocationism about humans is intuitions about the psychological components of personal identity: if one’s psychological states were transfered into a different head, one would go with the psychological states, while the animal would stay behind, so one isn’t an animal. Then I think one should say a similar thing about other higher animals. If we think that that an interpersonal relationship should follow the psychological states rather than the body of the person, we should think similarly about a relationship with one’s pet: if one’s pet’s psychological states are transfered into a different body, our concerns should follow. If Rover is having a vivid dream of chasing a ball, and we transfer Rover’s psychological states into the body of another dog, Rover would continue the dream in that other body. I don’t believe this in the human case, and I don’t believe it in the dog case, but if I believed this in the human case, I’d believe it in the dog case.

What are the reasons for the standard colocationist’s holding that the human animal thinks? One may say that because both the animal and the person have the same brain activity, that’s a reason to say that either both or neither thinks. But the brain also has the same brain activity, and so if this is one’s reason for saying that the animal thinks, we now have three thinkers. And, if there are unrestricted fusions, the mereological sum of the person with their clothes also has the same brain activity, thereby generating a fourth thinker. That’s absurd. Thus thought isn’t just a function of hosting brain activity, but hosting brain activity in a certain kind of context. And why can’t this context be partly characterized by modal characteristics, so that although both the animal and the person have the same brain activity, they provide a different modally characterized context for the brain activity, in such a way that only one of the two thinks?

This one-thinker colocationism can be either naturalistic or dualistic. On the dualistic version, we might suppose that the nonphysical mental properties belong to only one member of the pair of associated beings. On the naturalistic version, we might suppose that what it is to have a mental property is to have a physical property in a host with appropriate modal properties—the ones the person, the derson and the chimperson all have.

I think there is one big reason why a colocationist may be suspicious of this view. Ethologists sometimes explain animal behavior in terms of what the animal knows, is planning, and more generally is thinking. These explanations are all incorrect on the view in question. But the one-thinker co-locationist has two potential answers to this. The first is to weaken her view and allow animals to think, but not consciously. It is only the associated non-animal that has conscious states, that has qualia. But the conscious states need not enter into behavioral explanations. The second is to say that the scientists’ explanations while incorrect can be easily corrected by replacing mental properties with their neural correlates.

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