I'm open to the possibility that some systematizing explanation could also work. I just haven't yet seen one that I'm convinced by!
The problem with monism (at least, physicalism) is that it gets the space of possibilities wrong.
Idealism is actually much the same as dualism on the mind-body front (there could be disharmony between the phenomenal properties representing our brains/bodies and the phenomenal properties of pleasure/pain that we personally experience). But you'll have to wait for the release of Helen's book (chapter 3) for the full story there:
I'm open to the possibility that some systematizing explanation could also work. I just haven't yet seen one that I'm convinced by!
The problem with monism (at least, physicalism) is that it gets the space of possibilities wrong.
Idealism is actually much the same as dualism on the mind-body front (there could be disharmony between the phenomenal properties representing our brains/bodies and the phenomenal properties of pleasure/pain that we personally experience). But you'll have to wait for the release of Helen's book (chapter 3) for the full story there:
http://yetterchappell.net/Helen/idealism-book.html