With God in mind: divine action and the naturalisation of consciousness
dc.contributor.advisor
Harris, Mark
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dc.contributor.advisor
Sprevak, Mark
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dc.contributor.author
Ritchie, Sarah Lane
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dc.date.accessioned
2017-12-15T16:01:13Z
dc.date.available
2017-12-15T16:01:13Z
dc.date.issued
2017-11-27
dc.description.abstract
This thesis addresses the question of divine action in the mind: Is human consciousness a
uniquely nonphysical causal joint wherein divine intentions meet natural realities without
contravening lawlike physical processes? It is argued that consciousness is not uniquely spiritual
but wholly natural (and possibly physical). However, this need not lead to the conclusion that
divine action in the mind does not occur. Rather, this thesis argues that noninterventionist causal
joint programs (such as those privileging the mind as uniquely open to divine action) are both
scientifically implausible and theologically insufficient, resting on questionable metaphysical
presuppositions that are not necessitated by either theology or the natural sciences. By discarding
the God-nature model implied by contemporary noninterventionist divine action theories, one is
freed up to explore theological and metaphysical alternatives for understanding divine action in
the mind (and elsewhere). It is argued that a theologically robust theistic naturalism offers a more
compelling vision of divine action in the mind than that offered by standard causal joint theories.
By affirming that to be fully natural is to be involved with God’s active presence, one is then free
to affirm divine action not only in the human mind, but throughout the natural world.
This thesis is divided into two parts. Part One engages with the scientific and philosophical
literature surrounding human consciousness, and uses debates about the nature of the mind to
offer a sustained analysis and critique of what is termed the “standard model” of divine action. It
is argued that the noninterventionist, incompatibilist model of divine action that has spurred the
development of various causal joint theories is scientifically and theologically insufficient, and
that this is seen particularly clearly in recent theories locating (and constraining) divine action in
the emergent human mind. Chapter 2 analyses the contemporary divine action scene, arguing
that the standard model presumes noninterventionism, incompatibilism, and a high view of the
laws of nature. However, the God-world relationship implied by this model is theologically
insufficient. Chapter 3 examines Philip Clayton’s divine action theory, which locates divine
action in the emergent human mind and is the latest manifestation of the causal joint model
described in Chapter 2. After using emergence theory itself to critique Clayton’s approach, the
thesis then examines the philosophy and science of consciousness, in Chapters 4 and 5. It is
suggested that a physicalist understanding of the mind is a well-supported position.
Part Two of the thesis reframes divine action in the mind within an explicitly theological
framework. The thesis does this by analysing what is termed the “theological turn” in divine
action debates – the recent tendency to react against standard causal joint theories by rejecting
the idea that science can say anything about how and whether divine action occurs. Proponents
of the theological turn instead understand divine action from explicitly theological perspectives,
affirming compatibilist models in which God is seen to work in, through, and with natural
processes – precisely because God is never absent from nature in the first place. Such an
approach allows theologians to accept physicalist explanations of the mind, precisely because all
the natural world is necessarily involved with God. Chapter 6 introduces this theological turn by
exploring various versions of naturalism, ultimately suggesting that neither philosophy nor
science mandates the sort of metaphysical naturalism assumed not only by those who deny
divine action, but (ironically) noninterventionist divine action theorists as well. Chapters 7, 8, and
9 then introduce, compare, and contrast three different versions of strong theistic naturalism:
Thomism, panentheistic naturalism, and pneumatological naturalism. While each of these
explicitly theological frameworks is distinctive, they share an affirmation of the intimate
relationship between God’s immanent, active presence in the natural world, and suggest the
naturalised mind as a relatively intense locus of divine action, as human minds actively participate
in and with God. It is concluded that the participatory ontology supported by these theistic
naturalisms does, after all, suggest the mind as a locus of intensified divine action – but for very
different reasons than those motivating causal joint theorists.
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/25765
dc.language.iso
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dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.subject
divine action
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dc.subject
consciousness
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dc.subject
mind
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dc.subject
naturalism
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dc.title
With God in mind: divine action and the naturalisation of consciousness
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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