非洲人对心灵本质的看法:对约鲁巴语境二元论的反思

B. Balogun, R. Oyelakin
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引用次数: 1

摘要

关于心性的问题已经存在了很长时间。心灵是一个独立存在的实体,还是仅仅是身体事件和过程的一个方面,这一问题将西方哲学家分成了两个对立的阵营,即二元论和物理主义。当代关于心灵本质的论述,在西方哲学传统中,继续把物理主义置于二元论之上,因为它避免了二元论无法解释两个完全不同的实体如何相互作用所造成的理论僵局。尽管物理主义避免了二元论的陷阱,但是,它遇到了一个问题,即在不承诺与身体不同领域的二元论本体论的情况下,合理地解释意识经验的可能性。在这篇文章中,我们提供了一个非洲(约鲁巴)的视角来解决心灵的本质问题,作为以二元论和物理主义理论为代表的西方视角的替代方案。我们发展了二元论的一种变体,称为“情境二元论”,它接受身体和心灵二元性的二元论基本原则,但与之不同的是,它允许身体的某些生理器官也在精神能力中发挥作用。本文以民族学分析和约鲁巴语言解释学为理论框架,通过约鲁巴语的使用语境,揭示了身体器官作为身体的功能与作为精神的功能之间的差异。本文的结论是,语境二元论在主流二元论和物理主义之间制造了一个和解的楔子。
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An African Perspective on the Nature of Mind: Reflections on Yoruba Contextual Dualism
The problem of the nature of mind has lingered for a long time. Generated by the question of whether the mind is an independently existing entity or merely an aspect of bodily events and processes, the problem of the nature of mind has divided Western philosophers into two opposing camps, namely dualism and physicalism. Contemporary discourse of the nature of minds, within the Western philosophical tradition, continues to privilege physicalism over dualism, because it avoids the theoretical impasse engendered by the dualist inability to account for how two radically different entities manage to interact with each other. Although physicalism avoids the dualist pitfalls, it, however, encounters the problem of plausibly accounting for the possibility of conscious experience without commitment to the dualist ontology of a realm different from the body. In this article, we provide an African (Yoruba) perspective to the question of the nature of mind as an alternative to the Western perspective represented by dualist and physicalist theories. We develop a variant of dualism called “contextual dualism,” which accepts the dualist basic tenet of the duality of body and mind but diverges from it by permitting that some physical organs of the body also function in the capacity of the mind. Using ethnological analysis and the Yoruba linguistic hermeneutics as theoretical frameworks, the paper argues that the difference between when a physical organ functions as body and when it functions as mind is revealed in Yoruba language through their contexts of use. The paper concludes that contextual dualism drives a reconciliatory wedge between mainstream dualism and physicalism.
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