2003/2004

Towards a New Understanding of the Mental

Humanities

Principal investigators

Olav Gjelsvik

Professor
University of Oslo (UiO)
Year at CAS

Bjørn T. Ramberg

Professor
University of Oslo (UiO)
Year at CAS

Abstract

From Descartes until our own time, a central problem of philosophy has been the relation between the mental and the physical, the soul and the body. One way of putting it is that we conceive of a human being both as a physical/physiological system, and as an acting, thinking, and moral/normative system, and that it is far from obvious how something can be both. The present project attempts to work out a new approach for how to think about these issues. In particular we want to address how mental phenomena can exhibit causal powers in the right sort of way; why physical systems like those we presumably are cannot at all exist without intentional phenomena; and also whether the intentional phenomena physical systems bring into the world can exhibit the right sort of subjectivity and normativity, namely the subjectivity and normativity subjects of thought and experience manifest.

Key themes for the group: (i) the relationship between common knowledge of mental phenomena and various special sciences involving or approaching the mind (psychology, biology, neurology, sociology, economics) and (ii) the relationship between philosophical theories of mind and agency, on the one hand, and scientific approaches to the mind on the other.

Fellows

Jan Harald Alnes

Associate Professor
UiT The Arctic University of Norway (UiT)
Year at CAS
profile image illustration

Magne Dybvig

Professor
Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)
Year at CAS

Pascal Engel

Professor
Paris-Sorbonne University
Year at CAS

Dagfinn Føllesdal

Professor Em.
University of Oslo (UiO)

Carsten Hansen

Associate Professor
University of Oslo (UiO)
Year at CAS

Jennifer Hornsby

Professor
Birkbeck College, University of London
Year at CAS

Jonathan Lewis Knowles

Professor
Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)
Year at CAS

John R. Perry

Professor
Stanford University
Year at CAS
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Claudine Tiercelin

Professor
University of Paris
Year at CAS

Timothy Williamson

Professor
University of Oxford
Year at CAS

News

Funding bodies increasingly focus on research that is expected to be relevant in a short term perspective, Olav Gjelsvik says worryingly: ´This makes institutions like CAS much more important´.