Persons and Minds: Prospects of Nonreductive Materialism
Margolis (Joseph)
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Amazon Book Description

  1. Persons and Minds is an inquiry into the possibilities of materialism.
  2. Professor Margolis starts his investigation, however, with a critique of the range of contemporary materialist theories, and does not find them viable. None of them, he argues, "can accommodate in a convincing way the most distinctive features of the mental life of men and of lower creatures and the imaginative possibilities of discovery and technology" (p. 8).
  3. In an extraordinarily rich analysis, Margolis carefully considers and criticizes mind-body identity theories, physicalism, eliminative materialism, behaviorism, as inadequate precisely in that they are reductive.
  4. He argues, then, for ramified concepts of emergence, and embodiment which will sustain a philosophically coherent account both of the distinctive non-natural character of persons and of their being naturally embodied.
  5. But Margolis provokes us to ask, what is an embodied mind? The crucial context for him is not the plain physical body as such, but culture.
  6. "Persons", he writes, "are in a sense not natural entities: they exist only in cultural contexts and are identifiable as such only by reference to their mastery of language and of whatever further abilities presuppose such mastery" (p. 245).
  7. The hallmark of persons, in Margolis's account, is their capacity for freedom, as well as their physical endowment. Thus he writes, " ...their characteristic powers - in effect, their freedom - must inform the order of purely physical causes in a distinctive way" (p. 246).

Book Comment



"Cohen (Robert S.) & Wartofsky (Marx W.) - Persons and Minds: Editorial Preface"

Source: Margolis - Persons and Minds: Prospects of Nonreductive Materialism, Preface



"Margolis (Joseph) - Persons and Minds: General Introduction"

Source: Margolis - Persons and Minds: Prospects of Nonreductive Materialism, Introduction



"Von Eckardt (Barbara) - Margolis, Persons, and Nonreductive Materialism"

Source: Metaphilosophy, 12.81, 1981, pp. 169-180


Author’s Abstract
    Margolis's project consists essentially in providing answers to the following four questions. I will consider what he has to say about each in turn:
    1. What is a person;
    2. Why are persons emergent?;
    3. Why are persons culturally emergent?;
    4. How is the existence of persons compatible with naturalism?

Paper Comment

Review of "Margolis (Joseph) - Persons and Minds: Prospects of Nonreductive Materialism".



"Margolis (Joseph) - The Theory of Persons Sketched"

Source: Margolis - Persons and Minds: Prospects of Nonreductive Materialism, Chapter 1



"Margolis (Joseph) - The Relation of Mind and Body"

Source: Margolis - Persons and Minds: Prospects of Nonreductive Materialism, Chapter 2

Paper Comment

Part One: Mind/Body Identity



"Margolis (Joseph) - The Identity Theory"

Source: Margolis - Persons and Minds: Prospects of Nonreductive Materialism, Chapter 3

Paper Comment

Part One: Mind/Body Identity



"Margolis (Joseph) - Radical Materialism"

Source: Margolis - Persons and Minds: Prospects of Nonreductive Materialism, Chapter 4

Paper Comment

Part One: Mind/Body Identity



"Margolis (Joseph) - Materialism Without Identity"

Source: Margolis - Persons and Minds: Prospects of Nonreductive Materialism, Chapter 5

Paper Comment

Part One: Mind/Body Identity



"Margolis (Joseph) - Problems Regarding Persons"

Source: Margolis - Persons and Minds: Prospects of Nonreductive Materialism, 1977, Chapter 6


Author’s Introduction (Excerpt)
  1. In theorizing about persons, we are tempted to sort systematically all familiar solutions until it dawns on us that we lack a fully adequate and compelling theory and that, very likely, a really promising solution will elude our more conventional habits of mind. Still, we are bound to consider: the dualist solution or the more extreme idealist solution of disembodied souls or persons; the reductive solution that persons are nothing more than complex bodies; the solution that persons are ontologically as primitive as bodies but not reducible to them; and the solution that persons are forensically specified in terms of the special status or rights and responsibilities assigned to selected bodies or sentient creatures or the like, that may be independently individuated and identified.
  2. Here, philosophical prejudice serves as an economy. The dualist and the idealist solutions, however temp· tingly formulated, say, by Cartesians and Christians, simply fail to come to terms with the fact that what we want is an account that fits the life and behavior of the members of Homo sapiens. The forensic solution suffers the distinct disadvantage that it fails to accommodate the reflexive nature of the relevant attributions. It would be fine to suppose that bodies or sentient creatures were persons only insofar as we treated them as entitled to a certain status or as capable of intentions and behavior requisite to that status, but the theory fails to note that we, after all, actually make the ascriptions of one another; hence, nothing like the notion of a legal fiction could possibly account for the initial assignment of such status, whatever advantages there might be in construing human persons, once identified, as legal or legal·like persons.

Paper Comment
  • For the full text, follow this link (Local website only): PDF File1.
  • Part Two: Towards a Theory of Persons



"Margolis (Joseph) - Language Acquisition I: Rationalists vs. Empiricists"

Source: Margolis - Persons and Minds: Prospects of Nonreductive Materialism, Chapter 7

Paper Comment

Part Two: Towards a Theory of Persons



"Margolis (Joseph) - Language Acquisition II: First and Second Languages and the Theory of Thought and Perception"

Source: Margolis - Persons and Minds: Prospects of Nonreductive Materialism, Chapter 8

Paper Comment

Part Two: Towards a Theory of Persons



"Margolis (Joseph) - Propositional Content and the Beliefs of Animals"

Source: Margolis - Persons and Minds: Prospects of Nonreductive Materialism, Chapter 9

Paper Comment

Part Two: Towards a Theory of Persons



"Margolis (Joseph) - Mental States and Sentience"

Source: Margolis - Persons and Minds: Prospects of Nonreductive Materialism, Chapter 10

Paper Comment

Part Two: Towards a Theory of Persons



"Margolis (Joseph) - Psychophysical Interaction"

Source: Margolis - Persons and Minds: Prospects of Nonreductive Materialism, Chapter 11

Paper Comment

Part Three: Sentience and Culture



"Margolis (Joseph) - The Nature and Identity of Cultural Entities"

Source: Margolis - Persons and Minds: Prospects of Nonreductive Materialism, Chapter 12

Paper Comment

Part Three: Sentience and Culture



"Margolis (Joseph) - Action and Ideology"

Source: Margolis - Persons and Minds: Prospects of Nonreductive Materialism, Chapter 13

Paper Comment

Part Three: Sentience and Culture



Text Colour Conventions (see disclaimer)
  1. Blue: Text by me; © Theo Todman, 2025
  2. Mauve: Text by correspondent(s) or other author(s); © the author(s)



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