Does panpsychism explain mental causation?
Does panpsychism explain mental causation?
In the contemporary literature on panpsychism, one often finds the claim that a Russellian-monist version of panpsychism, i.e., Russellian panpsychism, is a superior view compared to alternative non-physicalist theories. The argument for this claim is that while Russellian panpsychism can integrate consciousness in the causal order and explain mental causation, alternative theories fail to do so. If this is correct, panpsychism deserves its place as a main contender in solving the mind-body problem. In this paper, I argue that Russellian panpsychism’s superiority in explaining mental causation over competing accounts is illusory. On one reading, the proposed explanation is not an explanation of the phenomenon that is at stake in the mental causation debate. On an alternative reading, it is an explanation of the right phenomenon, but analogous explanations are available to competing accounts with less counterintuitive commitments. While there may be other considerations supporting panpsychism, explaining mental causation is not one.
panpsychism, consciousness, mental causation
2437-2453
Baysan, Umut
69cc8c93-08a0-4b88-8192-eb5a22fa82e3
5 May 2024
Baysan, Umut
69cc8c93-08a0-4b88-8192-eb5a22fa82e3
Abstract
In the contemporary literature on panpsychism, one often finds the claim that a Russellian-monist version of panpsychism, i.e., Russellian panpsychism, is a superior view compared to alternative non-physicalist theories. The argument for this claim is that while Russellian panpsychism can integrate consciousness in the causal order and explain mental causation, alternative theories fail to do so. If this is correct, panpsychism deserves its place as a main contender in solving the mind-body problem. In this paper, I argue that Russellian panpsychism’s superiority in explaining mental causation over competing accounts is illusory. On one reading, the proposed explanation is not an explanation of the phenomenon that is at stake in the mental causation debate. On an alternative reading, it is an explanation of the right phenomenon, but analogous explanations are available to competing accounts with less counterintuitive commitments. While there may be other considerations supporting panpsychism, explaining mental causation is not one.
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s10670-024-00816-5
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Accepted/In Press date: 7 April 2024
Published date: 5 May 2024
Keywords:
panpsychism, consciousness, mental causation
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Local EPrints ID: 505317
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505317
ISSN: 0165-0106
PURE UUID: b87cc8ca-2d35-4e26-afd3-cbdc7b13dc3f
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Date deposited: 07 Oct 2025 16:32
Last modified: 08 Oct 2025 02:17
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Author:
Umut Baysan
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