Real reduction in real neuroscience : metascience, not philosophy of science (and certainly not metaphysics!)
Abstract
This chapter argues that much discussion between philosophers and neuroscientists is infected by philosophical assumptions about the nature of reduction. Instead we should pursue an unbiased examination of the methods used throughout relevant areas of neuroscience. The chapter focuses on reductionist work in the neurobiological discipline of molecular and cellular cognition. It is argued that reduction is a matter of causal intervention into low level mechanisms, and tracking of the effects of these interventions through levels. When interventions provide evidence that activity in the proposed reductive mechanism co-varies reliably with activity in the target property, such that appealing to higher-level mechanisms will not add any extra explanatory power, reduction can succeed. This is explicitly contrasted with functionalisation and a posteriori approaches to reduction.