David Herbert Lund is an American philosopher and writer. He is professor emeritus of philosophy at Bemidji State University.
Lund was born in Roseau, Minnesota. [1] He obtained a master's degree in psychology before he pursued his doctorate in philosophy from the University of Minnesota. His doctoral dissertation was "Private Language, the Egocentric Outlook, and the Nature of Mind". [2] He joined the philosophy department at Bemidji State University in 1972. [1]
He has criticized physicalist views of persons from self-awareness, perceptual experience and the intentionally of thought. [3] Lund has defended mind-body dualism. In his book Persons, Souls and Death, he argued that a person is an immaterial subject of conscious states, linked causally to the body but distinct from it. [1] He has argued for postmortum survival of the self. [4]
He contributed to Contemporary Dualism: A Defense, published in 2014. [5] Lund is retired and lives with his family on a farm in Northern Minnesota.