Boyle’s Reductive Occasionalism

Journal of Modern Philosophy 1 (1):2 (2019)
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Abstract

Was Robert Boyle an occasionalist? And if so, what kind of occasionalist was he? These questions have long troubled commentators, as Boyle’s texts often seem to offer both endorsements of occasionalism and affirmations of bodies’ causal powers. I argue that Boyle’s position is best understood as reductive occasionalism, according to which bodily powers are relations between bodies and God’s action in the world, and there is no causal efficacy in bodies that is not strictly identical to God’s nomological causal efficacy.

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Daniel Layman
Davidson College

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References found in this work

In defense of folk psychology.Frank Jackson & Philip Pettit - 1990 - Philosophical Studies 59 (1):31-54.
Boyle's Conception of Nature.J. E. McGuire - 1972 - Journal of the History of Ideas 33 (4):523.

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