An example of antireductionism in psychology is
Donald Davidson's proposed
ontology of what he calls 'events' and its use "to provide an antireductionist answer to the mind/matter debate ...[and to show that]...the impossibility of intertranslating the two idioms by means of
psychophysical laws blocks any analytically reductive relation between...the mental and the physical".. Velmans himself is not in agreement with this reductionist stance. Opposition to this
mind = brain reductionism is found in many authors. An often mentioned issue is that science cannot explain the
hard problem of consciousness, the subjective feelings called
qualia. Another objection, whose explicit formulation is due to the physicist and philosopher
Thomas Kuhn, is that science is not a self-contained entity, because the theories it uses are creations of the human mind, not inevitable results of experiment and observation, and the criteria for adoption of a particular theory are not definitive in selecting between alternatives, but require subjective input. Even the claim that science is based upon testability of its theories has been met with qualifications. According to
Alexander Rosenberg and
David Kaplan, the conflict between
physicalism and antireductionism can be resolved, that "both reductionists and antireductionists accept that given our
cognitive interests and limitations, non-molecular explanations may not be improved, corrected or grounded in molecular ones". However, others find that the conflict between reductionism and antireductionism is "one of the central problems in the philosophy of psychology...an updated version of the old
mind-body problem: how levels of theories in the behavioral and brain sciences relate to one another. Many contemporary philosophers of mind believe that cognitive-psychological theories are not reducible to neurological theories...most nonreductive
physicalists prefer the idea of a one-way dependence of the mental on the physical." ==See also==