Bill Vallicella wrote, in one of his eliminativism posts: EM is so patently absurd that I must ask myself: Is it a good use of my time to beat up a cripple or roll a drunk?
It's probably not that easy, because it's pretty difficult to get your mind around what the eliminativists are up to if you are unsympathetic to naturalism or materialism. I think, at the end of the day, self-refutation-style arguments do work.
I still consider William Hasker's critique of eliminativism in the first chapter of The Emergent Self to be the best critique of eliminativism that I have read.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0801487609/104-4163617-0857504?v=glance&n=283155
2 comments:
Victor, do you think there are any nonpropositional mental contents? For instance, are the contents of your visual experience propositional? If they are propositional, is this something you see by inspection of your conscious visual states? How do you know?
I am surprised to see the "life as we know it will explode if EM is true" claims endorsed with so little actual evidence.
I ordered Hasker's book. Have you read Bennett's Rationality? I am rereading it and it is excellent. Lots of Dretske in there, almost 20 years before Dretske's work.
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