Paul Churchland 

Paul Churchland
Western Philosophy
21st-century philosophy
Full name Paul Churchland
Birth October 21, 1942 (age 66)
School/tradition Analytic Philosophy
Main interests Neurophilosophy
Philosophy of science
Philosophy of mind
Artificial intelligence
Epistemology
Notable ideas Eliminative Materialism

Paul Churchland is a philosopher noted for his studies in neurophilosophy and the philosophy of mind.1 He is currently a Professor at the University of California, San Diego, where he holds the Valtz Chair of Philosophy.2 Churchland holds a joint appointment with the Cognitive Science Faculty and the Institute for Neural Computation.3 He earned his Ph.D. from the University of Pittsburgh in 1969 under the direction of Wilfrid Sellars.4 Churchland is the husband of philosopher Patricia Churchland, and the father of two children.5

Contents

Professional career

Churchland began his professional career as an instructor at the University of Pittsburgh in 1969;6 he also lectured at the University of Toronto from 1967-69.7 In 1969, Churchland took a position at the University of Manitoba, where he would teach for fifteen years: as an assistant professor (69 - 74) and associate professor (74 - 79), and then as a full professor from 1979 - 1984.8 Professor Churchland joined the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton University in 1982, staying as a member until 1983.9 He joined the faculty at the University of California, San Diego in 1983, serving as Department Chair from 1986 - 1990.10

Churchland has supervised a number of PhD students, including P.D. Magnus (now at the University at Albany) and Philip Brey (now at the University of Twente).

Philosophical Views

Along with his wife, Churchland is a major proponent of eliminative materialism, which claims that everyday mental concepts such as beliefs, feelings and desires are theoretical constructs without coherent definition; hence we should not expect such concepts to be a necessary part of a scientific understanding of the brain. Just as a modern understanding of science has no need for concepts such as luck or witchcraft to explain the world, Churchland argues that a future neuroscience is likely to have no need for "beliefs" or "feelings" to explain the mind. Instead, the use of objective phenomena such as neurons and their interaction should suffice. He points out that the history of science has seen many previous concepts discarded, such as phlogiston, caloric, the luminiferous ether, and vital forces.

Published Books

Professor Churchland has authored eight books in philosophy, which have been translated into ten different languages.

Of his books, Matter and Consciousness has been the most frequently and extensively reprinted.11 Both Scientific Realism and the Plasticity of Mind and A Neurocomputational Perspective have also been reprinted.12

Significant Essays

Professor Churchland has written a number of published articles that have had a substantial impact in philosophy. His essays have been translated into six different languages.

Each of these selected articles has been reprinted at least four times. Churchland's most famous essay is his 1981 Eliminative Materialism and the Propositional Attitudes. Published in a leading journal, this essay has been reprinted over twenty times and translated into five languages.

External links

References

  1. ^ "In more recent history, eliminative materialism has received attention from a broader range of writers, including many concerned not only with the metaphysics of the mind, but also the process of theory change, the status of semantic properties, the nature of psychological explanation and recent developments in cognitive science. Much of this attention has been fostered by the husband-wife team of Paul and Patricia Churchland, whose writings have forced many philosophers and cognitive scientists to take eliminativism more seriously." - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Eliminative Materialism: http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/materialism-eliminative/#BriHis
  2. ^ See: http://philosophy.ucsd.edu/fac/fac.html
  3. ^ See the UCSD Cognitive Science Inter-Disciplinary Faculty: http://www.cogsci.ucsd.edu/index.php?cat=grads&page=inter_phd-people
  4. ^ See: http://philosophy.uwaterloo.ca/MindDict/churchlandpm.html
  5. ^ See: http://philosophy.ucsd.edu/faculty/pchurchland/cv.pdf
  6. ^ For contact information that verifies this chronology, see: http://www.umc.pitt.edu/bulletins/graduate/fasPhilosophy.htm
  7. ^ To verify this chronology, see: http://philosophy.utoronto.ca
  8. ^ "He spent the first 15 years of his career at the University of Manitoba, taking advantage of its relative isolation to further develop his own approach to the ideas to which he was exposed during his graduate education." See: http://www.cambridge.org/us/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521537155&ss=exc
  9. ^ The Institute for Advanced Study can be reached online to verify this appointment; see: http://www.ias.edu/
  10. ^ Besides the faculty website referenced above, Professor Churchland's career chronology is available through the Philosophy of Science Section of the University of California at San Diego Department of Philosophy Web-Page. See: http://philosophy.ucsd.edu/graduate/philsci.html
  11. ^ See (1) Eliminative Materialism in Introducing Philosophy (R.C. Solomon, Pages 449 - 453); (2) Behaviorism, Materialism, and Functionalism in Reason and Responsibility: Readings in Some Basic Problems of Philosophy, Seventh Edition (Edited by J. Feinberg, Wadsworth Press); (3) Eliminative Materialism in Introductory Readings in Philosophy (Edited by J. Pojman, Wadsworth Press)
  12. ^ See (1) The Mind-Body Problem in Philosophy of Mind (Polish), by the Alethia Foundation (1995); (2) Knowing Qualia: A Reply to Jackson in The Nature of Consciousness: The Philosophical Debates edited by N. Block, O. Flanagan and G. Guzeldere (MIT Press - 1997)