Contents
Editors' Introduction
Torin Alter and Yujin Nagasawa
Part I: Precursors
Chapter 1: Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz, excerpt from Monadology
and letter to DeVolder
Chapter 2: Immanuel Kant, excerpt from Critique of Pure Reason
Chapter 3: William James, excerpt from The Principles of
Psychology
Chapter 4: Bertrand Russell, excerpts from Analysis of Matter
(1927), Human Knowledge: Its Scope and Limits (1948), Portraits
from Memory (1956), and My Philosophical Development (1959).
Chapter 5: Leopold Stubenberg, "Russell, Russellian Monism, and
Panpsychism"
Chapter 6: Donovan Wishon, "Russell on Russellian Monism"
Part III: Modern Classics and Recent Works
Chapter 7: Grover Maxwell, "Rigid Designators and Mind-Brain
Identity" (excerpt)
Chapter 8: Michael Lockwood, "The Grain Problem"
Chapter 9: Galen Strawson, "Real Materialism" (revised version,
with postscript)
Chapter 10: Barbara Gail Montero, "Russellian Physicalism"
Chapter 11: Gregg Rosenberg, "Causality and the Combination
Problem"
Chapter 12: David J. Chalmers, "Panpsychism and
Panprotopsychism"
Chapter 13: Torin Alter and Robert J. Howell, "The Short Slide from
A Posteriori Physicalism to Russellian Monism"
Chapter 14: Derk Pereboom, "Consciousness, Physicalism, and
Absolutely Intrinsic Properties"
Chapter 15: Daniel Stoljar, "Russellian Monism or Nagelian
Monism?"
Chapter 16: Alyssa Ney, "A Physicalist Critique of Russellian
Monism"
Chapter 17: Philip Goff, "Against Constitutive Russellian
Monism"
Chapter 18: Amy Kind, "Pessimism about Russellian Monism"
Chapter 19: Torin Alter and Yujin Nagasawa, "What is Russellian
Monism?"
Torin Alter is Professor of Philosophy at The University of
Alabama, USA. He is author of articles in Mind, Philosophical
Studies, and elsewhere; co-author of A Dialogue on Consciousness
and The God Dialogues: A Philosophical Journey (both OUP); and
co-editor of Consciousness and the Mind-Body Problem: A Reader and
Phenomenal Concepts and Phenomenal Knowledge: New Essays on
Consciousness and
Physicalism (both OUP).
Yujin Nagasawa is Professor of Philosophy at the University of
Birmingham, UK. He is author of God and Phenomenal Consciousness: A
Novel Approach to Knowledge Arguments (CUP) and co-editor of
There's Something About Mary: Essays on Phenomenal Consciousness
and Frank Jackson's Knowledge Argument (MIT Press).
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