Relations (1)

related 2.58 — strongly supporting 5 facts

Physical sciences are related to matter because they are described as providing only extrinsic, relational, or mathematical accounts of matter, as noted in [1], [2], [3], [4], and [5].

Facts (5)

Sources
Panpsychism - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2 facts
claimRussellian monists argue that the problem of consciousness arises because physical science remains silent on the intrinsic, concrete, or categorical features of matter.
claimRussellian monism posits that information from the physical sciences is limited because physics only describes the extrinsic, relational, mathematical, or dispositional nature of matter, leaving its intrinsic, concrete, and categorical nature unknown.
Critique of Panpsychism: Philosophical Coherence and Scientific ... thequran.love Zia H Shah MD · The Muslim Times 2 facts
claimRussellian panpsychism differs from traditional dualism because it does not posit a separate substance of mind, and it differs from standard physicalism because it asserts that current physical science cannot fully describe matter without including consciousness.
claimThe intrinsic nature argument for panpsychism posits that because physical science only describes extrinsic properties of matter, and because conscious experience is the only known intrinsic property, it is hypothesized that the intrinsic nature of matter is mental or proto-mental.
Panpsychism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Fall 2025 Edition) plato.stanford.edu Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1 fact
claimRussellian monists are motivated by the need to characterize the intrinsic nature of matter, arguing that physical sciences only describe the extrinsic, relational, mathematical, or dispositional nature of matter while leaving its intrinsic, concrete, and categorical nature unknown.