(redirected from Neutral Monism)

[Home]Neutral monism

HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences

Neutral monism is the philosophical view that mental events and physical events are both to be reduced (see reduction) to aspects of some neutral stuff, which stuff considered by itself is neither physical nor mental. Neutral monism was introduced by the great 17th-century Jewish-Dutch philosopher, Baruch Spinoza, and a version of it was recently revived by American philosopher [Donald Davidson]?.

HomePage | Recent Changes | Preferences
This page is read-only | View other revisions
Last edited August 31, 2001 9:39 am by Alan Millar (diff)
Search: