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This book demonstrates how a radical version of physicalism ('No-Self Physicalism') can offer an internally coherent and comprehensive philosophical worldview. It first argues that a coherent physicalist should explicitly treat a cognitive subject merely as a physical thing and should not vaguely assume an amorphous or even soul-like subject or self. This approach forces the physicalist to re-examine traditional core philosophical notions such as truth, analyticity, modality, apriority because our traditional understandings of them appear to be predicated on a cognitive subject that is not…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book demonstrates how a radical version of physicalism ('No-Self Physicalism') can offer an internally coherent and comprehensive philosophical worldview. It first argues that a coherent physicalist should explicitly treat a cognitive subject merely as a physical thing and should not vaguely assume an amorphous or even soul-like subject or self. This approach forces the physicalist to re-examine traditional core philosophical notions such as truth, analyticity, modality, apriority because our traditional understandings of them appear to be predicated on a cognitive subject that is not literally just a physical thing.

In turn, working on the assumption that a cognitive subject is itself completely physical, namely a neural network-based robot programmed by evolution (hence the term 'No-Self'), the book proposes physicalistic theories on conceptual representation, truth, analyticity, modality, the nature of mathematics, epistemic justification, knowledge, apriority andintuition, as well as a physicalistic ontology. These are meant to show that this No-Self Physicalism, perhaps the most minimalistic and radical version of physicalism proposed to date, can accommodate many aspects that have traditionally interested philosophers. Given its refreshingly radical approach and painstakingly developed content, the book is of interest to anyone who is seeking a coherent philosophical worldview in this age of science.

Autorenporträt
Feng Ye received his Ph.D. from Department of Philosophy, Princeton University, in 2000. He is currently a professor of logic and philosophy in Capital Normal University, Beijing, China. His research interests include philosophy of mathematics, philosophy of mind, and issues related to physicalism as a philosophical worldview. He is the author of three books, Strict Finitism and the Logic of Mathematical Applications (Synthese Library, vol. 355, Springer, 2011), Philosophy of Mathematics in the Twentieth Century: A Naturalistic Commentary (in Chinese) (Peking University Press, 2010), and From Philosophy of Mathematics to Physicalism (in Chinese) (Huaxia Press, 2016), as well as several journal articles.