Nancey Murphy's nonreductive physicalism

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Abstract

This essay examines Nancey Murphy's commitment to downward causation and develops a critique of that notion based upon the distinction between the causal relevance of a higher-level event and its causal efficacy. I suggest the following: (1) nonreductive physicalism lacks adequate resources upon which to base an assertion of real causal power at the emergent, supervenient level; (2) supervenience's nonreductive nature ought not obscure the fact that it affirms an ontological determination of higher-level properties by those at the lower level; and (3) the notion of divine self-renunciation, while consonant with Murphy's claim of supervenient, divine action, is nonetheless problematic. Throughout, I claim that the question of the causal efficacy of a level is logically independent from the assertion of its conceptual or nomological nonreducibility. © 1939 by the Joint Publication Board of Zygon.

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APA

Bielfeldt, D. (1999). Nancey Murphy’s nonreductive physicalism. Zygon, 34(4), 619–628. https://doi.org/10.1111/0591-2385.00240

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