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Plant Minds - A Philosophical Defense (Hardcover): Chauncey Maher Plant Minds - A Philosophical Defense (Hardcover)
Chauncey Maher
R1,740 Discovery Miles 17 400 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The idea that plants have minds can sound improbable, but some widely respected contemporary scientists and philosophers find it plausible. It turns out to be rather tricky to vindicate the presumption that plants do not have minds, for doing so requires getting clear about what plants can do and what exactly a mind is. By connecting the most compelling empirical work on plant behavior with philosophical reflection on the concept of minds, Plant Minds aims to help non-experts begin to think clearly about whether plants have minds. Relying on current consensus ideas about minds and plants, Chauncey Maher first presents the best case for thinking that plants do not have minds. Along the way, however, he unearths an idea at the root of that case, the idea that having a mind requires the capacity to represent the world. In the last chapter, he defends a relatively new and insightful theory of mind that rejects that assumption, making room for the possibility that plants do have minds, primarily because they are alive.

The Pittsburgh School of Philosophy - Sellars, McDowell, Brandom (Paperback): Chauncey Maher The Pittsburgh School of Philosophy - Sellars, McDowell, Brandom (Paperback)
Chauncey Maher
R1,700 Discovery Miles 17 000 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

In this volume, Maher contextualizes the work of a group of contemporary analytic philosophers The Pittsburgh School whose work is characterized by an interest in the history of philosophy and a commitment to normative functionalism, or the insight that to identify something as a manifestation of conceptual capacities is to place it in a space of norms. Wilfrid Sellars claimed that humans are distinctive because they occupy a norm-governed "space of reasons." Along with Sellars, Robert Brandom and John McDowell have tried to work out the implications of that idea for understanding knowledge, thought, norms, language, and intentional action. The aim of this book is to introduce their shared views on those topics, while also charting a few key disputes between them."

The Pittsburgh School of Philosophy - Sellars, McDowell, Brandom (Hardcover): Chauncey Maher The Pittsburgh School of Philosophy - Sellars, McDowell, Brandom (Hardcover)
Chauncey Maher
R4,434 Discovery Miles 44 340 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

In this volume, Maher contextualizes the work of a group of contemporary analytic philosophers The Pittsburgh School whose work is characterized by an interest in the history of philosophy and a commitment to normative functionalism, or the insight that to identify something as a manifestation of conceptual capacities is to place it in a space of norms. Wilfrid Sellars claimed that humans are distinctive because they occupy a norm-governed "space of reasons." Along with Sellars, Robert Brandom and John McDowell have tried to work out the implications of that idea for understanding knowledge, thought, norms, language, and intentional action. The aim of this book is to introduce their shared views on those topics, while also charting a few key disputes between them.

Plant Minds - A Philosophical Defense (Paperback): Chauncey Maher Plant Minds - A Philosophical Defense (Paperback)
Chauncey Maher
R676 Discovery Miles 6 760 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The idea that plants have minds can sound improbable, but some widely respected contemporary scientists and philosophers find it plausible. It turns out to be rather tricky to vindicate the presumption that plants do not have minds, for doing so requires getting clear about what plants can do and what exactly a mind is. By connecting the most compelling empirical work on plant behavior with philosophical reflection on the concept of minds, Plant Minds aims to help non-experts begin to think clearly about whether plants have minds. Relying on current consensus ideas about minds and plants, Chauncey Maher first presents the best case for thinking that plants do not have minds. Along the way, however, he unearths an idea at the root of that case, the idea that having a mind requires the capacity to represent the world. In the last chapter, he defends a relatively new and insightful theory of mind that rejects that assumption, making room for the possibility that plants do have minds, primarily because they are alive.

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