No Room at the Inn: Contemporary Philosophy of Mind Meets Thomistic Philosophical

Authors

  • Alfred J. Freddoso Department of Philosophy, University of Notre Dame

Keywords:

Thomas Aquinas, Dualism, Epistemology, Human Being, Human Intellective Soul, Materialism, Philosophy of Mind

Abstract

Contemporary philosophy of mind looks very strange from a Thomistic perspective. First of all, it classifies any theory of mind that invokes immateriality as a form of dualism, whereas St. Thomas insisted repeatedly on the unity of the human being. Second, the main contemporary arguments against materialism focus on sensible qualia, whereas the only Thomistic arguments for the subsistence and immateriality of the human intellective soul appeal only to intellective cognition and affection. In this paper I begin to explore these differences and suggest at the end that contemporary philosophy of mind is the product of an ill-conceived problematic that has cultural significance.

Downloads

Published

01-03-2015

How to Cite

Freddoso, Alfred J. “No Room at the Inn: Contemporary Philosophy of Mind Meets Thomistic Philosophical”. Acta Philosophica 24, no. 1 (March 1, 2015): 15–30. Accessed November 21, 2024. https://www.actaphilosophica.it/article/view/3811.

Issue

Section

Monographic section