Eliminative Materialism and the Propositional Attitudes

Journal of Philosophy 78 (2):67-90 (1981)
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Abstract

Eliminative materialism is the thesis that our common-sense conception of psychological phenomena constitutes a radically false theory, a theory so fundamentally defective that both the principles and the ontology of that theory will eventually be displaced, rather than smoothly reduced, by completed neuroscience. Our mutual understanding and even our introspection may then be reconstituted within the conceptual framework of completed neuroscience, a theory we may expect to be more powerful by far than the common-sense psychology it displaces, and more substantially integrated within physical science generally. My purpose in this paper is to explore these projections, especially as they bear on (1) the principal elements of common-sense psychology: the propositional attitudes (beliefs, desires, etc.), and (2) the conception of rationality in which these elements figure.

Other Versions

reprint Churchland, Paul (2003) "Eliminative Materialism and the Propositional Attitudes". In Heil, John, Philosophy of Mind: A Guide and Anthology, pp. : Oxford University Press (2003)

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