Premodern Buddhists are sometimes characterized as veritable
"mind scientists" whose insights anticipate modern research on the
brain and mind. Aiming to complicate this story, Dan Arnold
confronts a significant obstacle to popular attempts at harmonizing
classical Buddhist and modern scientific thought: since most Indian
Buddhists held that the mental continuum is uninterrupted by death
(its continuity is what Buddhists mean by "rebirth"), they would
have no truck with the idea that everything about the mental can be
explained in terms of brain events. Nevertheless, a predominant
stream of Indian Buddhist thought, associated with the
seventh-century thinker Dharmakirti, turns out to be vulnerable to
arguments modern philosophers have leveled against physicalism.
By characterizing the philosophical problems commonly faced by
Dharmakirti and contemporary philosophers such as Jerry Fodor and
Daniel Dennett, Arnold seeks to advance an understanding of both
first-millennium Indian arguments and contemporary debates on the
philosophy of mind. The issues center on what modern philosophers
have called "intentionality" -- the fact that the mind can be about
(or represent or mean) other things. Tracing an account of
intentionality through Kant, Wilfrid Sellars, and John McDowell,
Arnold argues that intentionality cannot, in principle, be
explained in causal terms.
Elaborating some of Dharmakirti's central commitments (chiefly
his apoha theory of meaning and his account of self-awareness),
Arnold shows that despite his concern to refute physicalism,
Dharmakirti's causal explanations of the mental mean that modern
arguments from intentionality cut as much against his project as
they do against physicalist philosophies of mind. This is evident
in the arguments of some of Dharmakirti's contemporaneous Indian
critics (proponents of the orthodox Brahmanical Mimasa school as
well as fellow Buddhists from the Madhyamaka school of thought),
whose critiques exemplify the same logic as modern arguments from
intentionality. Elaborating these various strands of thought,
Arnold shows that seemingly arcane arguments among first-millennium
Indian thinkers can illuminate matters still very much at the heart
of contemporary philosophy.
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