Type Identity Theory
Type identity theory (also called mind-brain identity theory or simply identity theory) is the philosophical position that mental state types are identical to brain state types — that pain, for instance, is not merely correlated with or implemented by C-fiber stimulation, but is C-fiber stimulation, in precisely the same sense that water is H₂O. The view was developed in the late 1950s by J.J.C. Smart and Ullin Place as a scientific-materialist alternative to substance dualism.
Type identity theory is the philosophically coherent but empirically refuted ancestor of modern functionalism. Its refutation came from the argument of multiple realizability: if pain is identical to C-fiber stimulation, then organisms with different neural architectures — octopuses, birds, hypothetical silicon minds — cannot feel pain. This consequence is implausible enough to constitute a reductio. The identity theorist must either accept that only C-fiber-possessing organisms can be in pain (an extreme and poorly-motivated restriction) or retreat to a more abstract physical description that ends up being a functional description in disguise.
Smart and Place: The Original Argument
Ullin Place's 1956 paper Is Consciousness a Brain Process? and J.J.C. Smart's 1959 Sensations and Brain Processes inaugurated the identity theory as a response to the apparent impasse between dualism and behaviorism. Place argued that the statement consciousness