2013
DOI: 10.4000/philosophiascientiae.853
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Brain and Mind

Abstract: Le débat sur les relations esprit-cerveau a été centré sur des questions relatives au libre arbitre. J'examine ce débat et conclus que les neurosciences n'ont pas de raisons méthodologiques, ontologiques ou théoriques convaincantes, pas plus que de raisons empiriques, pour rejeter la notion de libre arbitre. Parallèlement, je reconnais que la question est très controversée, à la fois en science et dans la société. Le problème se situe dans l'incompatibilité entre notions scientifiques du cerveau et notions pré… Show more

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“…This integrative approach to the mind-body problem has also been recently illustrated in a previous issue of the present journal, see [Vacariu & Vacariu 2013]. See in particular the articles [Rolls 2013] and[van Leeuwen 2013] for the first category and [Bechtel 2013] and [Theurer & Bickle 2013] for the second. Bechtel and Bickle are among the main flag-bearers of the emerging research subfield labelled "the philosophy of neuroscience" which promotes a more scientifically oriented approach to the philosophical analysis of the mind-body problem (see, for instance, [Bechtel, Mandik et al 2001 are better equipped to perform this task than any philosopher of mind in the traditional (and academic) sense of the term.…”
Section: Reorientating the Naturalism Issue From An Interdisciplinarysupporting
confidence: 62%
“…This integrative approach to the mind-body problem has also been recently illustrated in a previous issue of the present journal, see [Vacariu & Vacariu 2013]. See in particular the articles [Rolls 2013] and[van Leeuwen 2013] for the first category and [Bechtel 2013] and [Theurer & Bickle 2013] for the second. Bechtel and Bickle are among the main flag-bearers of the emerging research subfield labelled "the philosophy of neuroscience" which promotes a more scientifically oriented approach to the philosophical analysis of the mind-body problem (see, for instance, [Bechtel, Mandik et al 2001 are better equipped to perform this task than any philosopher of mind in the traditional (and academic) sense of the term.…”
Section: Reorientating the Naturalism Issue From An Interdisciplinarysupporting
confidence: 62%