1 - ACKNOWLEDGMENTS [Seite 7]
2 - Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION [Seite 9]
3 - 1.1 The mind-body problem in philosophy of mind [Seite 9]
4 - 1.2 The metaphysical issue of mental causation [Seite 11]
5 - 1.3 The epistemological reducibility of psychology [Seite 14]
6 - 1.4 Outline [Seite 16]
7 - Chapter 2 THE PROBLEM OF MENTAL CAUSATION [Seite 19]
8 - 2.1 Objects, events and properties: preliminary remarks [Seite 19]
9 - 2.2 Premises of the problem of mental causation [Seite 23]
10 - 2.3 Inconsistency of the premises [Seite 37]
11 - 2.4 Typology of possible positions in philosophy of mind [Seite 38]
12 - 2.5 Summary and transition [Seite 55]
13 - Chapter 3 ONTOLOGICAL REDUCTIONISM [Seite 57]
14 - 3.1 Classical type-identity [Seite 58]
15 - 3.2 Multiple realization in an ontological context [Seite 62]
16 - 3.3 Supervenience [Seite 67]
17 - 3.4 The causal completeness: psychology and physics [Seite 83]
18 - 3.5 Non-reductive physicalism [Seite 87]
19 - 3.6 The causal argument for the token-identity thesis [Seite 90]
20 - 3.7 The token-identity thesis as ontological reductionism [Seite 94]
21 - 3.8 Summary and transition [Seite 105]
22 - Chapter 4 PSYCHOLOGY AND NEUROSCIENCE [Seite 107]
23 - 4.1 General background [Seite 108]
24 - 4.2 Folks psychology as a functional theory of the mind [Seite 112]
25 - 4.3 Neuroscience [Seite 144]
26 - 4.4 Summary and transition [Seite 171]
27 - Chapter 5 EPISTEMOLOGICAL REDUCTIONISM [Seite 175]
28 - 5.1 Why epistemological reductionism? [Seite 176]
29 - 5.2 Classical reductionism and the requirements of reduction [Seite 180]
30 - 5.3 Multiple realization in an epistemological context [Seite 186]
31 - 5.4 Overcoming multiple realization [Seite 197]
32 - 5.5 The general dilemma of multiple realization [Seite 216]
33 - 5.6 Summary and transition [Seite 218]
34 - Chapter 6 REDUCTION BY MEANS OF FUNCTIONAL SUB-TYPES [Seite 221]
35 - 6.1 What should be expected from any account of epistemological reductionism? [Seite 222]
36 - 6.2 Starting point: an implication of multiple realization [Seite 224]
37 - 6.3 Reduction by means of functionally defined subtypes [Seite 228]
38 - 6.4 Summary and transition [Seite 251]
39 - Chapter 7 REDUCTION OF PSYCHOLOGY TO NEUROSCIENCE:CASES STUDIES [Seite 255]
40 - 7.1 How it works: guidelines to reducibility in principle [Seite 256]
41 - 7.2 Finding critical conditions of manifestations [Seite 268]
42 - 7.3 Down to neurobiology [Seite 281]
43 - 7.4 Summary and transition [Seite 293]
44 - Chapter 8 FINAL REMARKS [Seite 295]
45 - 8.1 Complete reductionism [Seite 295]
46 - 8.2 Conservative reductionism [Seite 298]
47 - 8.3 Back to the mind-body problem [Seite 301]
48 - BIBLIOGRAPHY [Seite 305]
49 - INDEX [Seite 317]