Functionalism
Functionalism holds that what makes a state a mental state is its causal role, not the physical stuff that realizes it.
Definition
Functionalism is the view that mental states are individuated by their functional roles, that is, by their causal relations to sensory inputs, behavioral outputs, and other mental states, rather than by their underlying physical realization.
Scope
This topic covers functionalism as a theory of the nature of mental states: machine-state, analytic (common-sense), and psychofunctionalist variants, the role of multiple realizability in motivating it, and the standard objections of absent and inverted qualia, the Chinese room, and the China-brain thought experiment.
Core questions
- What individuates a mental state if not its physical composition?
- How does functionalism accommodate the multiple realizability of mental states?
- Can a functional duplicate of a person lack conscious experience?
- Does functionalism leave out the qualitative character of experience?
Key concepts
- causal role
- multiple realizability
- Ramsey sentence
- absent qualia
- inverted qualia
- China-brain
Key theories
- Machine-state functionalism
- Mental states are like the states of a Turing machine, defined by their transitions among inputs, outputs, and other states, so the same psychology can run on different hardware.
- Analytic functionalism
- Mental terms are implicitly defined by the platitudes of common-sense psychology, with mental states being whatever occupies the causal roles those platitudes specify.
History
Functionalism emerged in the 1960s from Putnam's analogy between minds and Turing machines and from Lewis's and Armstrong's causal-role analyses, offering a physicalist alternative to type identity that respects multiple realizability. Block (1978) catalogued the qualia-based objections that have framed subsequent debate over whether functional organization suffices for mentality.
Debates
- Qualia objections
- Whether absent-qualia and inverted-qualia scenarios show that functional duplicates can differ in or lack conscious experience.
- Liberalism versus chauvinism
- Whether functional specifications are pitched so abstractly that they ascribe minds to systems that lack them, or so narrowly that they exclude genuine minds.
Key figures
- Hilary Putnam
- David Lewis
- Ned Block
- Jaegwon Kim
Related topics
Seminal works
- putnam1967
- lewis1972
- block1978
Frequently asked questions
- How does functionalism differ from the identity theory?
- The identity theory ties a mental state to a specific physical state, whereas functionalism ties it to a causal role that many different physical states could fill.