Relations (1)

related 0.10 — supporting 1 fact

Panpsychism is related to non-reductionism because the argument for panpsychism, as described in [1], rejects radical emergence, implying that mental properties cannot be reduced to purely physical ones without accounting for their fundamental nature.

Facts (1)

Sources
Panpsychism - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1 fact
claimThomas Nagel's argument for panpsychism relies on four premises: Material Composition (living organisms are complex material systems with no immaterial parts), Realism (mental states are genuine properties of living organisms), No Radical Emergence (all properties of a complex organism are intelligibly derived from the properties of its parts), and Non-Reductionism (mental states are not intelligibly derived from physical properties alone).