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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 March 2005
Although Ross & Spurrett (R&S) successfully fend off the threat of Kim's “supervenience argument” by showing that it conflates different notions of causation, their proposal for a dynamic systems answer to the mind-body problem is itself yet another supervenience claim in need of an explanation that justifies it. The same goes for their notion of “multiple supervenience.”
1. It is also not clear what work the qualifier “broad” is supposed to do: it seems perfectly plausible that one could know all facts about feedbackdriven servosystems (e.g., in the sense worked out by “control theory”) and still not understand at all how these facts pertain to minds (i.e., how control states are related to mental states).