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The Argument for Anomalous Monism, Again

Abstract

It is frequently argued that Donald Davidson’s anomalous monism implies property epiphenomenalism: that it renders the mental properties of events irrelevant to causal relations, so that rather than being a solution to the problem of how mental events cause physical ones, it actually denies that they do. Whilst this may be an appropriate criticism of the non-reductive physicalist theses that anomalous monism has inspired, I argue that it is an inappropriate criticism of Davidson’s position. Specifically, the extensional character of causation and the ontology on which the argument for anomalous monism is based preclude the possibility of levelling this kind of criticism at Davidson. I argue that such criticisms are made only by forcing onto anomalous monism an ontology that it actively seeks to deny; it is only by appreciating Davidson’s approach to metaphysics and causation in general that we can understand why the claim that anomalous monism implies property epiphenomenalism is so misguided.

Key takeaways

  • Where it ceases to become reasonable is when Davidson's anomalous monism is made the object of this line of attack either explicitly or because it has been classed, as it frequently is (e.g. Jacob, 2002), as a form of non-reductive physicalism.
  • Honderich argues that only those properties of an event that can enter into lawlike connections could be causally relevant and since, in anomalous monism, the mental properties of an event cannot enter into lawlike connections, he argues that it renders mental properties epiphenomenal; that anomalous monism entails property epiphenomenalism, or, as it is otherwise called (e.g. McLaughlin, 1993), type epiphenomenalism.
  • So, whilst mental properties are irreducible to physical ones, particular mental property-instances (that is, mental events which instantiate certain mental properties) may be either realised by (e.g., LePore & Loewer, 1987), or identical 3 to (e.g., Macdonald & Macdonald, 1991), a physical property-instance (that is, the physical event which instantiates certain Deren Olgun | The Argument for Anomalous Monism, Again universal physical properties).
  • As Gibb observes, property epiphenomenalism would be a plausible criticism of 'anomalous monism if embedded within a Kimean theory of events, but to criticise Davidson's theory under a scheme of events that is not his own would be question-begging' (Gibb, 2006: 414-415).
  • As Gibb notes, 'it is with good reason that Davidson refers to his position within the philosophy of mind as a monism rather than a physicalism, because for Davidson, events form a neutral class of entities' (Gibb, 2006: 414).