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Testament of A Recovering Eliminativist
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 April 2022
Abstract
If physicalism is true (e.g., if every event is a fundamental-physical event), then it looks as if there is a fundamental-physical explanation of everything. If so, then what is to become of special scientific explanations? They seem to be excluded by the fundamental-physical ones, and indeed to be excellent candidates for elimination. I argue that, if physicalism is true, there probably is a fundamental-physical explanation of everything, but that nevertheless there can perfectly well be special scientific explanations as well, notwithstanding eliminativist scruples concerning overdetermination and Ockham's Razor.
- Type
- Causation and Explanation
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- Copyright
- Copyright © Philosophy of Science Association 1996
Footnotes
Thanks to Robert Johnson, Peter Markie, and Paul Weirich for comments on an earlier draft; also to Carol C. Gould who, upon hearing my then eliminativist views in an interview, asked me if I had seen anyone about it.
Department of Philosophy, 438 General Classroom Building, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211.
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