Bertrand Russell's neutral monism is the view that objects are neither material nor mental. The most important implication of neutral monism is that we can constitute objects surrounding us by predicate logic. It sounds like interesting. However, neutral monism is not much discussed recently. Many philosophers see neutral monism as a kind of dualism. The closest type of neutral monism is David Chalmers' version of dualism. The question is why neutral monism is not much discussed. — mosesquine
Nowadays we prefer to think of the material world as a collection of elementary particles, or fields, or perhaps a single field, a single space–time manifold. On any of these views, macroscopic material objects will consist of arrangements of the ultimate constituents or, if you prefer the idea that the world is a single unified space–time manifold, a way this manifold is. This turns macroscopic objects into modes. — Heil
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