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Lewis, D. K. "Reduction of mind", pp. 412-431 in S. Guttenplan (ed). A Companion to the Philosophy of Mind.
In "Reduction of Mind" (1994b), David Lewis separates his contributions to philosophy of mind into two broad categories.
As he makes clear in "Reduction of Mind", this became an important part of his global reductionism.
There are important later discussions of it in "Reduction of Mind" and "Naming the Colours" (1997c), among many others.
Is such interaction possible, however, without either a materialist reduction of mind to matter or an idealist (phenomenalist) reduction of matter to mind?
(See, for instance, "Parts of Classes" (1991a), "Reduction of Mind", "Truthmaking and Difference-making" (2001d).) The second is contingently true if true at all.
Similar(51)
HBD: Heartbeat detection task; LTP: Long term practitioners; STM: Short term meditators; MBSR: Mindfulness-based stress reduction; ToM: Theory of mind; EF: Executive functions; BDI: Beck's depression inventory; STAI: State trait anxiety inventory; IFS INECOO frontal screening; IRI: Interpersonal reactivity index.
Whereas models and theories as candidate-relata for reduction received considerable attention in the philosophy of science, within the philosophy of mind reduction as a conceptual issue also played a major role.
Shafer-Landau suggests that this strategy is the most plausible one for explaining supervenience without reduction in the philosophy of mind, and that this should make us optimistic about the prospects of an analogous strategy in the moral case.
For the closest analogue there seems to be David Robb's attempt to explain supervenience without reduction in the philosophy of mind in terms of tropes, where tropes just are property instantiations.
We therefore hypothesize that the reduced functional connectivity of these precuneus/superior parietal cortex (paracentral lobule) regions is related to the altered representation or disconnection of the representation of oneself in the world that may contribute to the reduction in the theory of mind in autism (Lombardo et al., 2010).
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