Abstract
The theme of these is essays is what might be called, rather ambitiously, the nature of
the human mind. Psychologists and philosophers both investigate the nature of the
mind, but from rather different angles. Psychologists and neuroscientists investigate
the actual mechanisms in the brain, the body and the world which underpin mental
events and processes. Philosophers, by contrast, ask more abstract questions: for
example, about what makes any process mental at all, or how mental reality fits into
the rest of reality.
Psychology and philosophy are not opposed disciplines, but complementary,
and the boundary between them is not sharp. The essays collected here address some
of the most abstract philosophical questions, and barely touch on actual psychological
discoveries. Nonetheless, I think everything that is said in this book is consistent with
what psychologists have discovered and will discover. Where psychologists will want
to disagree with things said in this book, their disagreement will be based on a
difference of some philosophical opinion.