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Books > Philosophy > Topics in philosophy > Philosophy of mind
David-Hillel Ruben mounts a defence of some unusual and original positions in the philosophy of action. Written from a point of view out of sympathy with the assumptions of much of contemporary philosophical action theory, his book draws its inspiration from philosophers as diverse as Aristotle, Berkeley, and Marx. Ruben's work is located in the tradition of the metaphysics of action, and will attract much attention from his peers and from students in the field.
Eleven distinguished philosophers have contributed specially
written essays on a set of topics much debated in recent years,
including physicalism, qualia, semantic competence, conditionals,
presuppositions, two-dimensional semantics, and the relation
between logic and metaphysics. All these topics are prominent in
the work of Robert Stalnaker, a major presence in contemporary
philosophy, in honour of whom the volume is published. It also
contains a substantial new essay in which Stalnaker replies to his
critics, and sets out his current views on the topics discussed.
Contributors: Richard Heck, Frank Jackson, William Lycan, Vann
McGee, John Perry, Paul Pietroski, Sydney Shoemaker, Scott Soames,
Daniel Stoljar, Timothy Williamson, and Stephen Yablo.
The capacity to represent things to ourselves as possible plays a
crucial role both in everyday thinking and in philosophical
reasoning; this volume offers much-needed philosophical
illumination of conceivability, possibility, and the relations
between them.
This volume aims to inspire a return to the energetics of
Nietzsche's prose and the critical intensity of his approach to
nihilism and to give back to the future its rightful futurity. The
book states that for too long contemporary thought has been
dominated by a depressed what is to be done?. All is regarded to be
in vain, nothing is deemed real, there is nothing new seen under
the sun. Such a postmodern lament is easily confounded with an
apathetic reluctance to think engagedly. Hence the contributors
draw on the variety of topical issues - the future of life, the
nature of life forms, the techno sciences, the body, religion - as
a way of tackling the question of nihilism's pertinence to us now.
A team of leading experts investigate a range of philosophical
issues to do with the self and self-knowledge. Self and
Self-Knowledge focuses on two main problems: how to account for
I-thoughts and the consequences that doing so would have for our
notion of the self; and how to explain subjects' ability to know
the kind of psychological states they enjoy, which
characteristically issues in psychological self-ascriptions. The
first section of the volume consists of essays that, by appealing
to different considerations which range from the normative to the
phenomenological, offer an assessment of the animalist conception
of the self. The second section presents an examination as well as
a defence of the new epistemic paradigm, largely associated with
recent work by Christopher Peacocke, according to which knowledge
of our own mental states and actions should be based on an
awareness of them and of our attempts to bring them about. The last
section explores a range of different perspectives-from
neo-expressivism to constitutivism-in order to assess the view that
self-knowledge is more robust than any other form of knowledge.
While the contributors differ in their specific philosophical
positions, they all share the view that careful philosophical
analysis is needed before scientific research can be fruitfully
brought to bear on the issues at hand. These thought-provoking
essays provide such an analysis and greatly deepen our
understanding of these central aspects of our mentality.
At one time the causal theory of perception was regarded as our
last best hope of reliably connecting the subjective contents of
perception to external reality. With the decline of the view that
perception consists of subjective contents, thinkers have had to
reconceive the options for explaining perception/world relations.
In this break-through study, Gerald Vision proposes a new causal
theory, one that engages provocatively with a species of direct
realism and makes no use of the now discredited subjectivism. Both
providing a powerful survey of debate in the philosophy of
perception and taking the field in a brilliant new direction,
Problems of Vision: Rethinking the Causal Theory of Perception
makes invigorating reading for those trying to understand
perception - philosophers, students of philosophy, and cognitive
psychologists.
Experience and Possibility concerns the modal ontology of
experience. It investigates the detailed metaphysics of the colors,
shapes, and other concrete properties present in our experience of
ordinary concrete objects, and also of their spatial and temporal
relations. It examines their experienced particularity, and the
nature of their locations and material bits. This detailed concern
with specific cases reveals many inadequacies of traditional
ontology. But the central novelty of the book is an intense focus
on the modal aspects of such experienced entities, and what it
reveals about modality in general. The reality of such things would
involve in surprising ways not merely what would hence be actual
but also what would be merely possible. This supports a general
conception of modality, of the possible and the necessary,
according to which the actual and the possible are locally entwined
and involve different types of being. The particulars, properties,
and relations we experience involve distinctive forms of modal
structure, characteristic of specific sorts of universals and
irreducible particularities. When this experience is not veridical,
when for instance the color we experience is somewhat misleading
about reality, it is a puzzle how we have such experience
nonetheless. Exploration of these forms of modal structure is
groundwork for a new account of how our neurophysiology explains
such misleading experience, how our physical structure delivers
such qualia. This is sketched for the case of experienced color.
Its core idea is that the apparent modal structure of things we
experience is sometimes due to the actual modal structure of the
neurophysiology that constitutes that experience.
To what extent are meaning, on the one hand, and knowledge, on the
other, determined by aspects of the 'outside world'? Internalism
and Externalism in Semantics and Epistemology presents twelve
specially written essays exploring these debates in metaphysics and
epistemology and the connections between them. In so doing, it
examines how issues connected with the nature of mind and language
bear on issues about the nature of knowledge and justification (and
vice versa). Topics discussed include the compatibility of semantic
externalism and epistemic internalism, the variety of internalist
and externalist positions (both semantic and epistemic), semantic
externalism's implications for the epistemology of reasoning and
reflection, and the possibility of arguments from the theory of
mental content to the theory of epistemic justification (and vice
versa).
In the massive literature on the idea of the self, the Augustinian
influence has often played a central role. The volume Augustine Our
Contemporary, starting from the compelling first essay by David W.
Tracy, addresses this influence from the Middle Ages to modernity
and from a rich variety of perspectives, including theology,
philosophy, history, and literary studies.The collected essays in
this volume all engage Augustine and the Augustinian legacy on
notions of selfhood, interiority, and personal identity. Written by
prominent scholars, the essays demonstrate a connecting thread:
Augustine is a thinker who has proven his contemporaneity in
Western thought time and time again. He has been "the contemporary"
of thinkers ranging from Eriugena to Luther to Walter Benjamin and
Jacques Derrida. His influence has been dominant in certain eras,
and in others he has left traces and fragments that, when stitched
together, create a unique impression of the "presentness" of
Christian selfhood. As a whole, Augustine Our Contemporary sheds
relevant new light on the continuity of the Western Christian
tradition.This volume will interest academics and students of
philosophy, political theory, and religion, as well as scholars of
postmodernism and Augustine.Contributors: Susan E. Schreiner, David
W. Tracy, Bernard McGinn, Vincent Carraud, Willemien Otten, Adriaan
T. Peperzak, David C. Steinmetz, Jean-Luc Marion, W. Clark Gilpin,
William Schweiker, Franklin I. Gamwell, Jean Bethke Elshtain, Fred
Lawrence, and Francoise Meltzer.
What difference is there between the visual experience of watching
the moon in the sky and the visual experience of seeing a snake
slither by your foot? It is easy to believe our interpretation of
the world is split into a binary mode, between the bodily self and
everything outside it. There is, however, a buffer zone in the
immediate surrounding of the body, known as peripersonal space, in
which boundaries are blurred. The notion of peripersonal space
calls into question not only our entrenched theories of perception,
but also has major implications on the way we perceive personal and
social awareness. Research has yielded a vast array of exciting
discoveries on peripersonal space, across a variety of disciplines:
ethology, social psychology, anthropology, neurology, psychiatry,
and cognitive neuroscience. The World at Our Fingertips: A
Multidisciplinary Exploration of Peripersonal Space brings these
perspectives together for the first time, as well as introducing a
philosophical dialogue to the questions. Edited by a team of
leading psychologists and philosophers in the fields of
peripersonal space and bodily awareness, this comprehensive volume
presents the reader with a fresh, accessible dialogue between
authorities from vastly different areas of thought.
Robert Kilwardby on the Human Soul is the first in-depth study on
Kilwardby s contribution to the thirteenth-century philosophical
and theological debate on the nature of the soul and its relation
with the body. The book examines his innovative approach to the
plurality of substantial forms in the human person and argues
against the traditional interpretation of the Prohibitions of 1277
in Oxford as being directed to Thomas Aquinas. The investigation
into Kilwardby s theory of knowledge provides new insight on his
project to integrate Aristotelian and Augustinian doctrines. The
originality of his account of the active nature of perception and
his role in shaping standard views on truth, universals and
intentions bespeaks of his relevance for understanding later
medieval philosophical thought.
Decartes' maxim Cogito, Ergo Sum (from his Meditations) is perhaps
the most famous philosophical expression ever coined. Joseph Almog
is a Descartes analyst whose last book WHAT AM I? focused on the
second half of this expression, Sum--who is the "I" who is
existing-and-thinking and how does this entity somehow incorporate
both body and mind? This volume looks at the first half of the
proposition--cogito. Almog calls this the "thinking man's paradox":
how can there be, in the the natural world and as part and parcel
of it, a creature that... thinks? Descartes' proposition declares
that such a fact obtains and he maintains that it is self-evident;
but as Almog points out, from the point of view of Descartes' own
skepticism, it is far from obvious that there could be a
thinking-man. How can it be that a thinking human be both part of
the natural world and yet somehow distinct and separate from it?
How did "thinking" arise in an otherwise "thoughtless" universe and
what does it mean for beings like us to be thinkers? Almog goes
back to the Meditations, and using Descartes' own aposteriori
cognitive methodology--his naturalistic, scientific, approach to
the study of man--tries to answer the question.
"The Problem of the Rational Soul in the Thirteenth Century" traces
the Latin scholastics' attempt to deal with two essentially
incompatible notions of the human soul: the scientific view of
Aristotle which considers it to be a form, and the Augustinian view
of the soul as a substance in its own right, from Gundissalinus to
the Parisian condemnation of 1277. It traces the growing disarray
of Latin notions of the soul, the growth of the monopsychism
controversy, the solutions of Bonaventure and Aquinas, through the
variety of responses to Aquinas's "De unitate intellectus," Among
its conclusions are that the traditional dualism diminished with
time, that there was little agreement among the "heterodox
Aristotelians," and that, with two exceptions, no one in the
thirteenth century taught the present position of the Catholic
Church, that the rational soul is infused at conception.
Descartes held that only ideas are immediately perceived, and that
all ideas are really identical to mental states. Yet certain
passages in the Meditations seem to assert that some extramental
individuals -- the sun, for example, or a piece of wax -- can be
immediately perceived (not by the senses, but by the intellect). If
so then Descartes was committed to the seemingly absurd claim that
extramental things can be really identical to mental states. But
the claim is not absurd; as this book shows, it is based on a
coherent doctrine of intentional representation that was taught at
the Jesuit college of La Fleche that Descartes attended as a youth.
On this doctrine, an individual that is outside the mind with one
sort of being can be inside it with another. This book brings a
fresh perspective to the currently deadlocked debate over whether
Descartes was a representationalist or a direct realist, and sheds
new light on his difficult notions of material falsity and the
self-representational character of thought.
A collection of twelve essays by John Perry and two essays he
co-authored, this book deals with various problems related to
"self-locating beliefs": the sorts of beliefs one expresses with
indexicals and demonstratives, like "I" and "this." Postscripts
have been added to a number of the essays discussing criticisms by
authors such as Gareth Evans and Robert Stalnaker. Included with
such well-known essays as "Frege on Demonstratives," "The Problem
of the Essential Indexical," "From Worlds to Situations," and "The
Prince and the Phone Booth" are a number of important essays that
have been less accessible and that discuss important aspects of
Perry's views, referred to as "Critical Referentialism," on the
philosophy of language and the philosophy of mind.
Ruth Millikan is well known for having developed a strikingly
original way for philosophers to seek understanding of mind and
language, which she sees as biological phenomena. She now draws
together a series of groundbreaking essays which set out her
approach to language. Guiding the work of most linguists and
philosophers of language today is the assumption that language is
governed by prescriptive normative rules. Millikan offers a
fundamentally different way of viewing the partial regularities
that language displays, comparing them to biological norms that
emerge from natural selection. This yields novel and quite radical
consequences for our understanding of the nature of public
linguistic meaning, the process of language understanding, how
children learn language, and the semantics/pragmatics distinction.
In the last few years there has been an explosion of philosophical
interest in perception; after decades of neglect, it is now one of
the most fertile areas for new work. Perceptual Experience presents
new work by fifteen of the world's leading philosophers. All papers
are written specially for this volume, and they cover a broad range
of topics dealing with sensation and representation, consciousness
and awareness, and the connections between perception and knowledge
and between perception and action. This will be the book on the
philosophy of perception, a fascinating resource for philosophers
and psychologists.
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