The Churchlands in the New Yorker
This entry was posted on 2/15/2007 3:03 PM and is filed under Academia.
The last issue of the
New Yorker has a long profile of
Paul and
Patricia Churchland. This is a must-read for anyone who is not well acquainted with the history of the Churchlands.
Unfortunately, the article gets some important aspects of the background history wrong. For instance, it suggests that when the Churchlands went to college (1960s), behaviorism was dominant (what about cognitivism?) and philosophers did not discuss the mind-body problem and, with the exception of Thomas Nagel, continued to ignore the mind-body problem until David Chalmers revived it in the 1990s! It does not come as a surprise that
Chalmers was one of the authors' source, but I would hope that Chalmers did not describe the history the way they did.
The article argues that although the Churchlands convinced (some) philosophers of mind to pay attention to neuroscience, they, ot at least Pat, have since "left the field" of philosophy. In other words, Pat talks mostly to neuroscientists while ignoring other philosophers (except her husband, of course).