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    Ontological dependence of higher functions on lower proce... — Carmelics
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    Supports→Higher-level functions in human beings are ontologically dependent on lower-level processes but are not reducible to them.

    Ontological dependence of higher functions on lower processes is compatible with the autonomy and novelty of those higher functions.

    Consciousness & MindModality & Possibility
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    Modality & PossibilityConsciousness & Mind

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    Higher-level functions in human beings are ontologically dependent on lower-leve...Human beings exhibit physical, biological, mental, and spiritual features that r...Nonreductive naturalism acknowledges dependence without collapsing higher levels...

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    Higher-level functions in human beings are ontologically dependent on ...78%Proper function is determined by evolutionary or learning history, not...71%Unconscious automatic processes typically operate in ways that are mor...70%It is not immediately evident that all functions in Brouwer's sense mu...68%

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    Fischer has argued that Hartmann should be counted among the members of a “Cologne Constellation” of thinkers whose main project was the development of a philosophical anthropology that combined serious reflection on human being as a biological creature with the findings of the human sciences and humanities (Fischer 2012). Max Scheler, Helmuth Plessner (1892–1985), Hartmann, and later, Arnold Gehlen (1904–1976), are included in this group. They all shared the desire to bridge the dualism between

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