I'm not denying the physical substrates of the process. My point is that the mind is a process most likely generated
by the brain that can also, in turn, shape behavior and properties of the brain. I consider it a process that could be considered an entity in and of itself. I've gone into much lengthier detail on this before on another thread a while back but it seems I'm going to have to explain my reasoning behind this again.
I was referring to
Dancing David's previous comments to the effect that "there is no such thing as mind". Though you may not personally share an identical stance to his, I've encountered other forum members whose positions quite similar to that of
Dave's. So yes, there are those who 'write off' the mind.
I'll start with a statement I made to
Dave back on post
#78:
"What I'm saying is that this method of treatment is based on flawed assumptions of reductionist philosophy. The approach of thinking of mental illness strictly in terms of reducing it to neurological components will continue to yield the same superficial results you've been lamenting."
I suspect that there are two major philosophical flaws at the heart of whole "drug-as-cure" [DAC] approach in regards to psychology (though they are so interrelated its arguable that they are essentially one and the same):
What Daniel Dennett calls
greedy reductionism and determinism.
(Since reductionism necessarily implies determinism, for convenience sake I'll just refer to them collectively as 'reductionism')
The inherent limitations of the reductionist perspective are evident not only in the fields of psychology, but in just about any situation where there is
agency involved, namely biology in general. Organisms' ('conscious' or otherwise) are dynamic, coherent
wholes; they're systems whose behavior
as a whole is not strictly determined by their constituent parts.
In the context of psychological care, I would argue that the DAC approach is based on greedy reductionism because it sees mental disorders exclusively in terms of "malfunctioning" parts rather than as systemic problems.
I think the simplest way to state my position is that
an organism is not its constituent parts. Matter and energy are continuously flowing into and out of an organism. Considering this fact, its quite apparent that what an organism essentially
is is not, strictly speaking, the atoms and molecules comprising its structure at any given time. An organism is the coherent system that organizes and affects the behavior of said molecules. Its behaviors and properties are emergent and, in the case of sentient organisms like us, they are
strongly emergent.
Theres a pretty workable grasp of a lot of the simpler chemical components in the nervous system, but understanding of the nature of the organizing system of the mind, in a rigorous sense, is very lacking. A major reason for this is that much of the field of psychology is almost myopically focusing on components to the neglect of the organizational pattern. The description of the properties and behaviors of an organism, and especially one with a mind, is not reducible simply to that of its chemical components. Psychology is not mere branch of biochemistry, but it seems a lot of psychiatric practitioners treat is as such.
Well the definition of matter that I' am going off of is
"anything that has both mass and volume (i.e. takes up space)"
With that in mind think of three very good examples 'what isn't matter':
-Space-time
-Energy
-information
Matter is a
category of entity, and being a
catergory, is not a universal. My point is that
matter is not the only ontologically salient 'stuff' of the universe.
Okay, lets look at it this way.
Matter and energy are fundamentally equivalent, yes? But its conceptually useful to categorize them separately because there are obviously distinguishing characteristics.
Right now physicists, consider electormagenetism, the weak, and the strong nuclear forces to be manifestations of the same field [its assumed that gravity is also included in this totality of fields but physicist haven't figured out how yet]. At the same time they are, for all practical intents and purposes, categorized as distinct.
There isn't a 'duality' between matter and energy, but there are distinctions. There isn't any real 'plurality' of forces tho there are different articulations of the same field.
Now one can say that everything is
just matter,
just energy, or
just fields but such a conceptualization isn't very useful for understanding the nuances of reality.
With all that said, I'm arguing that the mind isn't
just matter. It isn't very useful or insightful to think of it simply in terms of being a mere collection of matter.
Anyways I hope that, while you may not agree with me, that helped make what I'm trying to say a little more clear for you.