Any talk about a separate or separable soul rests on a category error.  Critically evaluate this claim [40]

In his book “The Concept of Mind” (1949) Gilbert Ryle attacked what he called the “official doctrine” of dualism or “the doctrine of the ghost in the machine”, arguing that the idea of a separate and particularly a separable soul depends on a “category error” or misuse of language.  To explain the idea of a category mistake he used the analogy of a foreigner watching a game of cricket and asking to see the “team spirit” as another feature of the game, alongside bats, balls and fielders. He also uses the analogies of a tourist visiting Oxford and asking to see “the university” separately from the colleges, libraries etc. that make it up, and of a discussion about the British Constitution confusing people into believing that there is such a document. Ryle means that when we talk about the “soul” we are confused into thinking that it is something separate from how the brain and body function, which implies that it might also be separate.  Clearly, dualists ranging from the Substance Dualists Plato and Descartes through to the Modified Dualist Aristotle, Critical Dualists Popper and Eccles and Property Dualist Chalmers would disagree with Ryle.  They all argue that there is a separate soul, which for Plato and Descartes is separable also. Nevertheless, Ryle successfully showed that dualists are wrong, meaning that he was right to say that talk about the soul rests on a category error.

Firstly, the arguments for substance dualism and the existence of a separable soul are deeply unimpressive.  Plato argued for the soul using arguments from affinity, opposites and simplicity which are mere assertions arising from Plato’s general metaphysical worldview and theory of the forms. His claim that recollection supports the existence of an immortal, pre-existent soul, articulated in the Meno through the example of the slave-boy learning geometry, is similarly unconvincing.  Chomsky’s nativism explains how the brain is structured or “hard-wired” with linguistic and mathematical concepts, so our facility in learning these can be explained biologically rather than by appealing to a separable soul.  Descartes was more sophisticated than Plato, accepting that universals are pure ideas rather than metaphysical realities in a separate “world of the forms” and yet his worldview is also antiquated. Advances in science and technology show that Descartes is wrong to give up on sense-observations as a way of understanding reality and wrong to see ultimate reality as conceptual.  Similarly, Descartes is wrong to claim that “I” am my soul when as Chan observed, what he regards as the “soul” is so affected by brain injury and drugs and when research into neuro-biology so falsifies his theories about the pineal gland.  In the end, both Plato and Descartes appeal to how we feel to support their substance dualism.  While it is true that most people feel like souls and not like bodies, having a self-concept that is largely unchanged by time or physical impairment, as both Norman Malcolm and Brian Davies have observed, the way I feel is not necessarily the way things are.  Just because I feel sober doesn’t mean that I am sober!  This shows that talk of a separable soul is confused and unconvincing, making Ryle’s argument that it is based on a category error and misuse of language convincing.

Secondly, the arguments for a weaker form of dualism, whereby the soul is separate but not separable, are more convincing than those for substance dualism and a separable soul, but in the end even “modified dualism” is still “giving up on science” as Dennett put it.  Aristotle’s claim that the soul exists as the formal cause of the body, being separate but not able to exist without a body, makes sense of both experience and the lack of evidence for a separable soul, but there is little really to support his assertion that the soul exists separately, his theory of the tripartite soul let alone his claim that the Sophia part of the rational soul might be immortal.  Similarly, while Popper’s argument for critical dualism is compelling, using world 3 evidence such as art or music as evidence for the existence of a mind or soul and world 1, in practice his own research with Eccles into the operation of the frontal lobes shows that the creativity he cites as evidence for a separate mind or soul can in fact be explained in physical, material terms. Chalmers’ property dualism is little more persuasive as although he is right to suggest that there are physical objects and separately, how we experience them as qualia, the fact that he links them and sees them as two poles of the same reality suggests that qualia do not truly support the existence of a separate mind or soul.  While as Blackmore admits, we do not yet understand the “Hard Problem” of consciousness, our lack of material explanations are not a conclusion that something immaterial exists.  It follows that we should continue looking for material explanations of consciousness and embrace Ryle’s suggestion that “the soul” is not really a separate entity but rather a product of our language and limited understanding at the present time.

On the other hand, Ryle’s claim that category errors explain all talk about a separate or separable soul could be too simple.  It is true that Ryle’s behaviourism struggles to account for the “reality” of mental events in the imagination or memory, or for qualia.  Frank Jackson’s 1982 thought experiment “Mary’s Room” convinces many that there is something more that we learn through subjective experience than we could ever learn theoretically, suggesting that there is a mind or soul whose activity and experiences cannot be described in physical terms.  Also, Popper’s suggestion that “world three” provides verifiable evidence for the activity of and so the existence of the soul is persuasive. However, in the end just because neuroscience cannot as yet explain the hard problem of consciousness doesn’t mean that one day it won’t.  As Dennett wrote and as Blackmore agreed, “dualism is giving up”.  It is also true that there is significant evidence for paranormal experiences, ranging from near death experiences to telekinesis. Vardy lists ten different types of paranormal experience which suggest the existence of minds or souls separately from bodies.  HH Price also confirms that the possibility of out-of-body existence makes sense in relation to both logic and our human experience.  Pam Reynolds’ near death experience is probably the most famous example of a near death experience where there is medical evidence that what she experienced happened when the brain had no electrical activity at all.  Dr Sam Parnia’s extensive research into near death experiences shows that experiences like Pam’s are neither rare nor explicable in physical or material terms as the product of brain activity.  Nevertheless, Blackmore’s research showed that there is much less hard evidence for paranormal activity than is claimed, concluding after 25 years that all the reports she had investigated were either mistaken or in some cases fraudulent.  Dawkins would agree that so-called evidence of paranormal events should be approached sceptically and placed in the context of the weight of evidence against their possibility.  It follows that, dualists go well beyond the evidence in concluding the existence of a separate, let alone a separable, soul on the basis of very slight evidence indeed.

In conclusion, Ryle was right to dismiss talk of a separate or separable soul and argue that this is the product of ignorance or confusion.  Materialism, as I have argued, is much more persuasive than any form of dualism.  Of course, Ryle’s argument is rather more specific than that, claiming that all discussion of soul rests on a “category error” and it is probably fair to say that this is an overstatement.  Sometimes people use the word soul in a metaphorical sense, what Dawkins called a soul 2 sense, which is not quite the same as making a category error.  However, the thrust of Ryle’s argument, that dualism is a false doctrine, still stands. 

Examples of mystical experiences should be considered valid religious experiences. Discuss [40]

In his “Varieties of Religious Experience” William James argued that examples of mystical experiences which have the four marks of being passive, transient, ineffable and noetic justify their recipient’s belief in God and deserve to be taken seriously by others, as potentially valid religious experiences. Yet, atheists like Richard Dawkins remain unconvinced, arguing that “exceptional claims demand exceptional evidence” and dismissing all “mystical experiences” as fakes or mistakes. Overall, Dawkins’ argument arises from prejudice and an unscientifically closed mind, so James’ argument is more persuasive.

Firstly, Dawkins rejects the claim of any “mystical experience” to be considered a valid religious experience.  Like David Hume in his analysis “Of Miracles”, Dawkins reasons that it is always more probable that the experience was the result of psychological and/or physiological processes than that the experience was of God.  Dawkins’ argument has intuitive appeal and has been supported by other atheists, including Susan Blackmore, Christopher Hitchens and Sam Harris, yet it does not stand up to closer scrutiny. Yes, scientists can “explain away” individual experiences… saying that St Augustine undergoing a moral crisis and St Bernadette an attention-seeker… but each explanation is different, while what the mystics claim to have experienced is one and the same. Is it more likely that so many different people in different circumstances are all deluded from multiple different improbable causes, or that what so many people have reported to have experienced in diverse ways is real?  As James concluded, “higher” mystical experiences “offer us HYPOTHESES, hypotheses which we may voluntarily ignore, but which as thinkers we cannot possibly upset.[1]” It is fair to say that Dawkins chooses to ignore examples of mystical experiences which, if taken seriously and properly investigated, might yield a better insight into reality than the narrow scientific materialism that Dawkins seems wedded to.  In “The Existence of God” Richard Swinburne has shown how it is slightly more probable that God exists than not and that – given that prior probability and the principles of credulity and testimony – the existence of so many religious experiences (though defined more broadly than according to James’ four marks) tips the balance decisively in favour of God’s existence. Dawkins’ argument that mystical experiences are always more probably fakes or mistakes than valid has thus been falsified.

Secondly, scientists like Dawkins have sought to provide alternative explanations for mystical experiences to show that they are not valid religious experiences.  Yet, as James pointed out, such explanations cannot account for the positive and lasting change that such experiences bring about in their recipients’ lives. For example, it may be that St Paul’s experiences were the result of epileptic seizures, but this medical explanation can’t account for the spiritual effect of the experiences on Paul and through him, on the world. Many people have had epileptic seizures, but only one wrote most of the New Testament. Further, despite his scepticism about their causes, Dawkins is fascinated by spiritual experiences and volunteered to be a research subject, wearing Michael Persinger’s “God helmet” to discover what so many religious people have felt.  Afterwards, he said that he was “very disappointed” by the experience, finding that the brain stimulation did not in fact create the sensation that mystics report.  This suggests that one of the most common scientific means of “explaining away” mystical experiences is not credible. In addition, assuming that some experiences are valid, God must appear to people in some way; if not through visions or voices, then through some ineffable, transient sensation as reported by mystics.  Yet, whatever sensation God chooses is bound to be affected by disorders, so that if a person has an ineffable sensation, it is likely to be diagnosed in terms of an associated disorder.  Also, even if scientists can identify how somebody might have an unusual sensation, this does not account for why they had the sensation… God could be working through physiological processes.  All of this shows that Dawkins is wrong and that examples of mystical experiences should be considered as potentially valid religious experiences.

On the other hand, claimed “mystical experiences” are very diverse and vary in credibility. It is difficult to define mystical experiences so that only those that are credible are included when claiming that they should be considered valid religious experiences. For example, James argued that “higher” mystical experiences, such as should be considered as valid religious experiences, have the four marks of being passive, transient, ineffable and noetic. Yet, it is not clear that even the examples James appeals to have all four marks.  James uses St Teresa of Avila’s descriptions of mystical experiences to develop his argument, yet were these experiences really either passive or transient… and given the number of words she used to describe them, were they ineffable either?  Further, other scholars have defined mystical experiences differently, either more narrowly as in the definitions of Otto and Stace, or more broadly, as in the definitions of Swinburne and the Alister Hardy Centre.  The lack of a single, clear definition for mystical experiences and the inclusion of less credible experiences within some of these definitions surely undermines the case for considering them valid religious experiences.  Nevertheless, perhaps the lack of a clear definition is to be expected if mystical experiences are valid religious experiences. As James points out, language is inadequate when it comes to describing God so that scholars have sometimes resorted to the apophatic way or analogy and the use of qualifiers. Why would we expect people to be able to describe mystical experiences of God any more clearly? 

In conclusion, examples of mystical experiences should be considered as potentially valid religious experiences.  While some claimed mystical experiences lack credibility and are probably not valid religious experiences, others deserve serious consideration and scientific investigation that does not begin from a fixed starting point of naïve materialism.


[1] https://csrs.nd.edu/assets/59930/williams_1902.pdf page 325