In this final lecture in this series on the nature of causation, Marianne Talbot discusses the topic of mental causation. We do what we do because we believe what we believe. Or do we? How does mental causation work?
We have causal theories of reference, perception, knowledge, content and numerous other things. If it were to turn out that causation doesn’t exist, we would be in serious trouble! Causation is so important in fact that it has been said that: “With regard to our total conceptual apparatus, causation is the centre of the centre”, and it has been called ‘the cement of the universe’. In these lectures you will be introduced to the most influential theories of causation, the motivations for them and arguments behind them, and the problems they face.
This is from a six-part lecture series on the nature of causation given at Oxford in 2016.
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The Nature of Causation: Mental Causation
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Analytic PhilosophyEpistemologyOntologyMetaphysicsSocial PhilosophyHistory of PhilosophyConsciousnessPhilosophy of MindDualismMaterialismPhysicalismEmergenceMental CausationReductionismEpiphenomenalismSubjectivitySubject-ObjectMind-Body ProblemQualiaDescartesCartesianFree WillIdentity TheoryMonismTheory of MindFunctionalismIntentionalityThe SelfThe Hard ProblemOther MindsDonald DavidsonPhilosophyCausal ClosureKripkeExternalism