Physicalism, substance, and the shifting locus of fundamentality

Item

Title
Physicalism, substance, and the shifting locus of fundamentality
Identifier
d_2009_2013:138ba4b80464:11312
identifier
11804
Creator
Goldwater, Jonah P. B.,
Contributor
Barbara G. Montero | Peter Simpson
Date
2012
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
Metaphysics | Philosophy of science | Aristotle's Metaphysics | Fundamentality | Physicalism | Substance
Abstract
I demonstrate two main theses. First, the physicalist and Aristotelian worldviews are deeply incompatible, particularly in regards to the locus of fundamentality: where the fundamental level of reality is taken to be, which entities, processes, and facts are understood as fundamental, and, as a corollary, which are taken to be derivative or unreal. Second, the physicalist is committed to eliminativism about what the Aristotelian thinks is the fundamental basis of reality. And as these Aristotelian theses largely comport with a common-sense ontology, I thereby show that physicalism is far more revisionary than many have suspected.
Type
dissertation
Source
2009_2013.csv
degree
Ph.D.
Program
Philosophy