精神功能障碍是否独立于脑功能障碍?从个人/亚个人的区别来看。

Marko Jurjako
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管许多精神病学作者赞同自然主义的精神观,但仍有许多人认为精神功能障碍不能归结为大脑功能障碍。本文探讨了产生这一观点的主要原因。一些论点依赖于这样的类比:心灵就像软件,而大脑就像硬件。这个类比表明,正如软件可以独立于硬件故障而发生故障一样,精神也可以独立于任何大脑故障而发生故障。这一观点在最近的文献中得到了严格的检验。然而,其他较少讨论的原因表明,精神功能障碍不能归结为脑功能障碍,因为精神功能障碍被恰当地归因于有意识的精神状态水平,而脑功能障碍仅与解剖和生理过程的异常有关。本文质疑为什么这样的观点会得到支持。讨论是在认知科学哲学的界面问题框架内进行的,它涉及个人和亚个人层面的解释之间的关系。本文考察了这样一种观点,即自主主义者对个人/亚个人区分的观点可以证明,用故意术语描述的精神功能障碍与用解剖学或生理学术语描述的脑功能障碍之间的分离是合理的。最后,这篇论文认为自主论的观点不能在精神病学中得到支持,因此,不能为拒绝将精神功能障碍归结为脑功能障碍提供原则性的理由。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Are mental dysfunctions autonomous from brain dysfunctions? A perspective from the personal/subpersonal distinction.

Despite many authors in psychiatry endorsing a naturalist view of the mind, many still consider that mental dysfunctions cannot be reduced to brain dysfunctions. This paper investigates the main reasons for this view. Some arguments rely on the analogy that the mind is like software while the brain is like hardware. The analogy suggests that just as software can malfunction independently of hardware malfunctions, similarly the mind can malfunction independently of any brain malfunction. This view has been critically examined in recent literature. However, other less discussed reasons suggest that mental dysfunctions cannot be reduced to brain dysfunctions because mental dysfunctions are appropriately ascribed at the level of intentional mental states, while brain dysfunctions are solely related to abnormalities in anatomy and physiological processes. This paper questions why such a view would be upheld. The discussion is framed within the interface problem in the philosophy of cognitive science, which concerns the relationship between personal and subpersonal levels of explanation. The paper examines the view that an autonomist perspective on the personal/subpersonal distinction could justify the separation of mental dysfunctions, described in intentional terms, from brain dysfunctions, described in anatomical or physiological terms. Ultimately, the paper argues that the autonomist view cannot be upheld in psychiatry and, consequently, does not provide a principled justification for rejecting the reduction of mental dysfunctions to brain dysfunctions.

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