Paul
Geoff wrote:
There is no metaphysical difference between reductive and eliminative materialism. They both make an identical metaphysical claim : physicalism is true. The difference between them is that the reductive versions allow for the continued usage of mind to refer to something which can both be reduced to the physical yet fundamentally isn't physical.
Paul replied :
I disagree completely.
Then you're completely wrong. Reduction and elimination aren't the same thing but you think they are.
Reductive materialists explicitly state that there is nothing that cannot be reduced:
As opposed the the eliminativists who claim
there is nothing to be reduced in the first place.
See the difference? It's very important.
Reductive materialism (Identity theory) claims that there is no independent, autonomous level of phenomena in the world that would correspond to the level of conscious mental states. It also states that the level of conscious phenomena is identical with some level of purely neurological description. Conscious phenomena are nothing over and above the neural level, thus it can be reduced to that level.
Originally Posted by Geoff :
This is impossible to do, so all reductive physicalism depend on making a distinction between mental and physical whilst at the same time being unable to explain in any detail what the distinction is. It is an attempt to have one's cake and eat it.
I don't see this in the above definition.
Then you're not looking. Sentence by sentence analysis:
"Reductive materialism (Identity theory) claims that there is no independent, autonomous level of phenomena in the world that would correspond to the level of conscious mental states."
This claims that physicalism is true. It claims minds have a referent but that it "does not refer to an autonomous level of phenomena".
"Conscious phenomena are nothing over and above the neural level, thus it can be reduced to that level."
This is a claim that physicalism is true, and that all mental terms
can be reduced to physicalism terms. What it does *NOT* do is explain how this "reduction" is supposed to work. In my theory, which is reductive, there are two levels of ontological description - phenomenal and noumenal. My
reduction involves reducing phenomenal things to noumenal things. In this way, I do not need to eliminate any mental terms. But this "reductive materialism" cannot explain what it means by "reduce". Eliminativists would argue that this term "reduce" means nothing more than "eliminate".
In other words, reductive materialism does not (usually) explicitly claim it cannot eliminate the mental words, but it NEVER claims it
can eliminate them. Instead, it tries to redefine them as physical (turning it into eliminativism) or it glosses over the unspecified relationship between mental and physical (turning it into dualism in an badly-fitting dress.)
Geoff