5. A Physicalist Approach to the Person
A fifth approach to theological anthropology in light of
evolution is that of nonreductive physicalism. It has recently been explored,
along with the views of the person discussed above, in several research
programs relating scientific studies in the cognitive and neurosciences,
philosophical discussions of the mind/brain problem, and theological
anthropology. In a 1998 anthology, Whatever Happened to the Soul? Nancey Murphy defines nonreductive physicalism as the view that the person
is a physical organism whose complex functioning, both in society and in
relation to God, gives rise to higher human capacities such as morality and
spirituality.As she admits, physicalism must meet two objections: is it preferable
theologically to dualism? how is it truly different from materialism? Much of
her work, and that of her colleagues in this volume, involves responding to
these issues. Nonreductive physicalism was defended by Malcolm Jeeves in light
of recent advances in the cognitive neurosciences.J. Elving Andersondrew on recent work in genetics to challenge reductive materialism and Joel
Green argued
that recent Biblical scholarship rejects a body/soul dualism in favor of
ontological monism and soteriological wholism. Murphy argued that philosophies
of emergence and top-down causation mitigate against materialism, while
scientific evidence such as Jeeves describes supports physicalism instead of
dualism. Moreover,
instead of appealing to the soul, various types of religious experience can
be accounted for, as Warren Brownsuggests, by the emergent human capacities for higher cognitive and emotional
experience as well as human relatedness.
Murphy returned to the topic of nonreductive physicalism in
the context of the cognitive and neurosciences a year later.Her primary goal was to explain why, given supervenience, complete causal
reduction of the mental to the neurobiological sometimes fails. To do so Murphy
argued that many supervenient properties are codetermined by context; when
entities participate in the context of higher levels by virtue of their
supervenient properties, downward causation is possible. At the same time,
mental causation (e.g., reasons effecting neural states) is possible because a)
Murphy first expands the concept of environment to include the intellectual
environment and then b) she shows how neural networks are formed and reshaped
by feedback loops with the environment, some of which reinforce these networks.
It is the intellectual environment in particular which, through the supervenience
relations, exerts selective pressures on brain states. Bill Stoegerand Theo Meyeringhave also discussed mental states as supervenient on brain-states in ways that
guard the integrity of a causal explanation at the neurobiological level and the
distinctive causal role for mentality.The problem of reductionism, downward causation, and free will in the context
of the cognitive and neurosciences was treated further in very recent articles
by Meyering, Murphy,Brown, Richardsonand Bielfeldt.
Contributed by: Dr. Robert Russell
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