I agree. In particular I often find these discussions very frustrating because people arguing for elimination seem to think they are arguing about the ‘reality’ of things when in fact they’re arguing about the scale of things. (And sometimes about the specificity of the underlying structures that the higher level systems are implemented on). I don’t think anyone ever expected to be able to locate anything important in a single neuron or atom. Nearly everything interesting in the universe is found in the interactions of the parts not the parts themselves. (Also—why would we expect any biological system to do one thing and one thing only?).
I regard almost all these questions as very similar to the demarcation problem. A higher level abstraction is real if it provides predictions that often turn out to be true. It’s acceptable for it to be an incomplete / imperfect model, although generally speaking if there is another that provides better predictions we should adopt it instead.
This is what would convince me that preferences were not real: At the moment I model other people by imagining that they have preferences. Most of the time this works. The eliminativist needs to provide me with an alternate model that reliably provides better predictions. Arguments about theory will not sway me. Show me the model.
I agree. In particular I often find these discussions very frustrating because people arguing for elimination seem to think they are arguing about the ‘reality’ of things when in fact they’re arguing about the scale of things. (And sometimes about the specificity of the underlying structures that the higher level systems are implemented on). I don’t think anyone ever expected to be able to locate anything important in a single neuron or atom. Nearly everything interesting in the universe is found in the interactions of the parts not the parts themselves. (Also—why would we expect any biological system to do one thing and one thing only?).
I regard almost all these questions as very similar to the demarcation problem. A higher level abstraction is real if it provides predictions that often turn out to be true. It’s acceptable for it to be an incomplete / imperfect model, although generally speaking if there is another that provides better predictions we should adopt it instead.
This is what would convince me that preferences were not real: At the moment I model other people by imagining that they have preferences. Most of the time this works. The eliminativist needs to provide me with an alternate model that reliably provides better predictions. Arguments about theory will not sway me. Show me the model.