Churchland argued that mental states are brain states. He subscribes to a view known as eliminative materialism, which suggests that mental states will eventually be explained solely by physical processes in the brain.
Of or pertaining to materialism or materialists; of the nature of materialism.
It's not a law. Materialism and atheism don't necessarily have anything to do with each other; theistic materialism exists, and the materialism part is still the same (it's incidental that there is or isn't a god involved). See "What is Materialism?" to better understand that part.
The book Materialism was written by Jorie Graham.
Denial of materialism
Hylephobia is the name of the phobia related to the fear of materialism
Christianity looks down on materialism as an obstacle to spirituality.
Materialism in the relative sense is understood by Buddhists. Attachment and aversion to materialism is likely to lead to suffering as with any other composite phenomena.
Materialism is the self-indulgent pursuit of acquiring possessions to the exclusion of helping others in need.
Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism was created in 1973.
Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism has 227 pages.
Hard materialism posits that everything can be explained by physical processes, while soft materialism allows for the possibility of non-physical phenomena influencing the physical world. Soft materialism is more flexible and open to the idea of consciousness or mental states existing beyond physicality, whereas hard materialism strictly adheres to a reductionist view of the world.