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Reduction and holism in biological systems such as ant colonies have been under debate for many decades. Back in 1911, William Morton Wheeler wrote an influential article entitled “The Ant-Colony as an Organism” in the Journal of Morphology (vol. 22, no. 2, 1911, pp. 307–325). More recently, Edward O. Wilson has written a remarkably thorough treatise on social insects, called The Insect Societies (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard Univ. Press, Belknap Press, 1971). We are not aware of any literature exploring the intelligence of societies; for example, can an ant colony learn new tricks?

The explicitly antireductionistic sentiment has been put forward vehemently by an international group whose most outspoken member is the novelist and philosopher Arthur Koestler. Together with J.R. Smythies, he has edited a volume called Beyond Reductionism (Boston: Beacon Press, 1969) and has stated his own position eloquently in Janus: A Summing Up (New York: Vintage, 1979), particularly the chapter entitled “Free Will in a Hierarchic Context.”

The quotations in the Reflections on “Prelude, Ant Fugue” are from Richard D. Mattuck, A Guide to Feynman Diagrams in the Many-Body Problem (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1976), and Inside the Brain (New York: Mentor, 1980), by William H. Calvin and George A. Ojemann. Aaron Sloman, who was probably the first person trained as a philosopher to he field of artificial intelligence, is the author of The Computer Revolution in Philosophy (Brighton, England: Harvester, 1979). Like many revolutionary manifestos, Sloman’s book vacillates between declaring victory, declaring that victory is inevitable, and exhorting the reader to a difficult and uncertain campaign. Sloman’s vision of the accomplishments and prospects of the movement is rose-tinted, but insightful. Other landmark work on systems of knowledge representation can be found in Lee W. Gregg, ed., Knowledge and Cognition (New York: Academic Press, 1974); Daniel G. Bobrow and Allan Collins, eds., Representation and Understanding (New York: Academic Press, 1975); Roger C. Schank and Robert P. Abelson, Scripts, Plans, Goals and Understanding (Hillsdale, N.J.: Erlbaum, 1977); Nicholas V. Findler, ed., Foundations of Semantic Networks (New York: Academic Press); Donald A. Norman and David Rumelhart, eds. Explorations in Cognition (San Francisco: W. H. Freeman, 1975); Patrick Henry Winston, The Psychology of Computer Vision (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1975); and the other books and articles on artificial intelligence mentioned in this chapter.

The strategy of speaking figuratively of homunculi, little people in the brain whose joint activity composes the activity of a single mind, is explored in detail in Daniel C. Dennett’s Brainstorms (Montgomery, Vt.: Bradford Books, 1978). An early article in this vein was F. Attneave’s “In Defense of Homunculi,” in W. Rosenblith, ed., Sensory Communication, (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1960, pp. 777–782). William Lycan advances the cause of homunculi in “Form, Function, and Feel,” in the Journal of Philosophy (vol. 78, (1), 1981, pp. 24–50). See also Ronald de Sousa’s “Rational Homunculi” in Rorty’s The Identities of Persons.

Disembodied brains have long been a favorite philosophical fantasy. In his Meditations (1641), Descartes presents the famous thought experiment of the evil demon or evil genius. “How do I know,” he asks himself in effect, “that I am not being tricked by an infinitely powerful evil demon who wants to deceive me into believing in the existence of the external world (and my own body)?” Perhaps, Descartes supposes, the only thing that exists aside from the demon is his own immaterial mind—the minimal victim of the demon’s deceit. In these more materialistic times the same question is often updated: How do I know that evil scientists haven’t removed my brain from my head while I slept and put it in a life-support vat, where they are tricking it—me—with phony stimulation? Literally hundreds of articles and books have been written about Descartes’s thought experiment with the evil demon. Two good recent books are Anthony Kenny’s Descartes: A Study of his Philosophy (Random House, 1968), and Harry Frankfurt’s Demons, Dreamers, and Madmen: The Defense of Reason in Descartes’ Meditations (Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1970). A fine anthology is Willis Doney, ed., Descartes: a Collection of Critical Essays (New York: Macmillan, 1968). A particularly memorable and amusing discussion is O. K. Bouwsma’s “Descartes’ Evil Genius,” in the Philosophical Review (vol. 58, 1949, pp. 141–151).

The “brain in the vat” literature, of which Zubotff’s strange tale is a previously unpublished instance, has recently been rejuvenated with some new critical slants. See Lawrence Davis’s “Disembodied Brains,” in the Australasian Journal of Philosophy (vol. 52, 1974, pp. 121–132), and Sydney Shoemaker’s “Embodiment and Behavior,” in Rorty’s The Identities of Persons. Hilary Putnam discusses the case at length in his new book, Reason, Truth and History (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1981), and argues that the supposition is not just technically outrageous but deeply, conceptually incoherent.

Part IV. Mind as Program

The theme of duplicate people—atom-for-atom replicas—has been picked up from fiction by philosophers, most notably by Hilary Putnam, who imagines a planet he calls Twin Earth, where each of us has an exact duplicate or Doppelgänger, to use the German term Putnam favors. Putnam first presented this literally outlandish thought experiment in “The Meaning of ‘Meaning’,” in Keith Gunderson, ed., Language, Mind and Knowledge (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1975, pp. 131–193), where he uses it to establish a surprising new theory of meaning. It is reprinted in the second volume of Putnam’s collected papers, Mind, Language and Reality (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1975). While it seems that almost no philosopher takes Putnam’s argument seriously—that’s what they all say—few can resist trying to say, at length, just where he has gone wrong. A provocative and influential article that exploits Putnam’s fantasy is Jerry Fodor’s intimidatingly entitled “Methodological Solipsism Considered as a Research Strategy in Cognitive Psychology,” published, along with much furious commentary and rebuttal, in The Behavioral and Brain Sciences (vol. 3, no. 1, 1980, pp. 63–73). His comment on Winograd’s SHRDLU, quoted in the Reflections on “Non Serviam,” comes from this article, which is reprinted in Haugeland’s Mind Design.

Prosthetic vision devices for the blind, mentioned in the Reflections on both “Where Am I?” and “What is it Like to be a Bat?”, have been under development for many years, but the best systems currently available are still crude. Most of the research and development has been done in Europe. A brief survey can be found in Gunnar Jansson’s “Human Locomotion Guided by a Matrix of Tactile Point Stimuli,” in G. Gordon, ed., Active Touch (Elmsford, N.Y.: Pergamon Press, 1978, pp. 263–271). The topic has been subjected to philosophical scrutiny by David Lewis in “Veridical Hallucination and Prosthetic Vision,” in the Australasian Journal of Philosophy (vol. 58, no. 3, 1980, pp. 239–249).