The rise of modern science has brought with it increasing acceptance among intellectual elites of a worldview that conflicts sharply both with everyday human experience and with beliefs widely shared among the world’s great cultural traditions. Most contemporary scientists and philosophers believe that reality is at bottom purely physical, and that human beings are nothing more than extremely complicated biological machines. On such views our everyday experiences of conscious decision-making, free will, and the self are illusory by-products of the grinding of our neural machinery. It follows that mind and personality are necessarily extinguished at death, and that there exists no deeper transpersonal or spiritual reality of any sort. Beyond Physicalism is the product of an unusual fellowship of scientists and humanities scholars who dispute these views. In their previous publication, Irreducible Mind, they argued that physicalism cannot accommodate various well-evidenced empirical phenomena including paranormal or psi phenomena, postmortem survival, and mystical experiences. In this new theory-oriented companion volume they go further by attempting to understand how the world must be constituted in order that these “rogue” phenomena can occur. Drawing upon empirical science, metaphysical philosophy, and the mystical traditions, the authors work toward an improved “big picture” of the general character of reality, one which strongly overlaps territory traditionally occupied by the world’s institutional religions, and which attempts to reconcile science and spirituality by finding a middle path between the polarized fundamentalisms, religious and scientific, that have dominated recent public discourse. Contributions by: Harald Atmanspacher, Loriliai Biernacki, Bernard Carr, Wolfgang Fach, Michael Grosso, Michael Murphy, David E. Presti, Gregory Shaw, Henry P. Stapp, Eric M. Weiss, and Ian Whicher
Among our "test-drivers" we give particular thanks to Carlos S. Alvarado, William Barnard, Frank Benford, Lori Derr, ... Owen Flanagan, Arthur Hastings, Sean Kelly, Antonia Mills, Michael Murphy, Gary Owens, Frank Poletti, Dean Radin, ...
Robert J. Howell offers a new account of the relationship between conscious experience and the physical world, based on a neo-Cartesian notion of the physical and careful consideration of three anti-materialist arguments.
In Mind Beyond Brain, the neuroscientist David E. Presti, with the assistance of other distinguished researchers, explores how evidence for anomalous phenomena—such as near-death experiences, apparent memories of past lives, apparitions, ...
Is a physicalist account of consciousness possible? The book's starting point is the "supervenience" argument (sometimes called the "exclusion" argument), which Kim reformulates in an extended defense.
Physicalism, the thesis that everything is physical, is one of the most controversial problems in philosophy.
Challenging assumptions about the mind-body problem, this accessible book will interest scholars working in metaphysics, philosophy of mind, and philosophy of science.
In this volume, philosophers and theologians advance several novel criticisms of the growing trend toward physicalism in Christian theology.
The first half of this book argues that physicalist views cannot account for the evident reality of conscious experience, and hence that physicalism cannot be true.
In this book, Steven Horst argues that this whole conversation is based on assumptions left over from an outdated philosophy of science.
From Anecdote to Experiment in Psychical Research. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. Timpe, K. (Ed.). (2017). The Routledge Companion to Free Will. New York: Routledge. Tyrrell, G. N. M. (1946a). The modus operandi of paranormal cognition ...