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9 - The Rise and Fall of Computational Functionalism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 January 2010

Oron Shagrir
Affiliation:
Member of the Department of Philosophy and Chair of the program in Cognitive Science, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Yemima Ben-Menahem
Affiliation:
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Hilary Putnam is the father of computational functionalism, a doctrine he developed in a series of papers beginning with “Minds and Machines” (1960) and culminating in “The Nature of Mental States” (1967b). Enormously influential ever since, it became the received view of the nature of mental states. In recent years, however, there has been growing dissatisfaction with computational functionalism. Putnam himself, having advanced powerful arguments against the very doctrine he had previously championed, is largely responsible for its demise. Today, he has little patience for either computational functionalism or its underlying philosophical agenda. Echoing despair of naturalism, he dismisses computational functionalism as a utopian enterprise.

My aim in this essay is to present both Putnam's arguments for computational functionalism and his later critique of the position. In section 2, I examine the rise of computational functionalism. In section 3, I offer an account of its demise, arguing that it can be attributed to recognition of the gap between the computational-functional aspects of mentality and its intentional character. This recognition can be traced to two of Putnam's results: the familiar Twin-Earth argument, and the less familiar theorem that every ordinary physical system implements every finite automaton. I close with implications for cognitive science.

THE RISE OF COMPUTATIONAL FUNCTIONALISM

Computational functionalism is the view that mental states and events – pains, beliefs, desires, thoughts and so forth – are computational states of the brain, and so are defined in terms of “computational parameters plus relations to biologically characterized inputs and outputs” (1988:7).

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Hilary Putnam , pp. 220 - 250
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

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