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1. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 67 > Issue: 1
Sydney Shoemaker Realization, Micro-Realization, and Coincidence
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Let thin properties be properties shared by coincident entities, e.g., a person and her body, and thick properties ones that are not shared. Thick properties entail sortal properties, e.g., being a person, and the associated persistence conditions. On the first account of realization defined here, the realized property and its realizers will belong to the same individual. This restricts the physical realizers of mental properties, which are thick, to thick physical properties. We also need a sense in which mental properties can be realized in thin physical properties shared by a person and her body. Defining this in turn requires defining a sense in which the instantiations of sortal properties and of thick properties are realized in micro-structural states of affairs. A fourth notion of realization is needed to allow for the possibility of coincident entities that share a sortal property, e.g., coincident persons.
2. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 67 > Issue: 1
Richard Boyd Finite Beings, Finite Goods: The Semantics, Metaphysics and Ethics of Naturalist Consequentialism, Part II
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3. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 67 > Issue: 1
Abraham D. Stone Specific and Generic Objects in Cavell and Thomas Aquinas
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Here I establish a parallel between modem epistemology and traditional metaphysics: between the way we know an object, on the one hand, and the way an object’s causes cause it to exist, on the other. I show that different efficient causes in the Thomistic system correspond to different questions of knowledge, as analyzed by Stanley Cavell, and that in particular the question the Cavellian skeptic asks corresponds to God’s causation in creation. As I have explained in detail elsewhere, and discuss briefly here, this parallel represents far more than a formal analogy between a series of issues in epistemology and a series of issues in metaphysics. It helps to explain, in fact, why modern philosophers (e.g., Husserl) were ultimately driven to put the human ego in the place of God, as creating (or “positing”) the objects of its knowledge, thereby denying the very distinction between epistemology and ontology.
4. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 67 > Issue: 1
Paul Noordhof Self-Deception, Interpretation and Consciousness
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I argue that the extant theories of self-deception face a counterexample which shows the essential role of instability in the face of attentive consciousness in characterising self-deception. I argue further that this poses a challenge to the interpretist approach to the mental. I consider two revisions of the interpretist approach which might be thought to deal with this challenge and outline why they are unsuccessful. The discussion reveals a more general difficulty for Interpretism. Principles of reasoning-in particular, the requirement of total evidence-are given a weight in attentive consciousness which does not correspond to our reflective judgement of their weight. Successful interpretation does not involve ascribing beliefs and desires by reference to what a subject ought to believe and desire, contrary to what Interpretists suggest.
5. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 67 > Issue: 1
Margaret Atherton How Berkeley Can Maintain That Snow Is White
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Berkeley has made the bold claim on behalf of his theory that it is uniquely able to justify the claim that snow is white. But this claim, made most strikingly in the Third of his Three Dialogues, has been held, most forcefully by Margaret Wilson, to conflict with Berkeley’s argument in the First Dialogue that, because of various facts to do with perceptual variation, colors are merely apparent and hence, mind-dependent. This paper develops an alternative reading of the First Dialogue arguments, in which their project is not to establish the mind-dependence of colors but instead to undermine the position that colors are also mind-independent. Under these circumstances, the coherence of the First and the Third Dialogue arguments is assured, just so long as the Third Dialogue claim to have established that snow is really white is not taken to mean that snow is mind-independently white, but instead, something like that our experiences of snow are stably and regularly white.
discussion
6. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 67 > Issue: 1
Robert Merrihew Adams Anti-Consequentialism and the Transcendence of the Good
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7. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 67 > Issue: 1
Ned Block Do Causal Powers Drain Away?
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8. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 67 > Issue: 1
Jaegwon Kim Blocking Causal Drainage and Other Maintenance Chores with Mental Causation
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book symposium:
9. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 67 > Issue: 1
Robert Audi Précis of The Architecture of Reason
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10. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 67 > Issue: 1
Walter Sinnott-Armstrong Experience and Foundationalism in Audi’s The Architecture of Reason
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11. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 67 > Issue: 1
Richard Fumerton Audi on Rationality: Background Beliefs, Arational Enjoyment, and the Rationality of Altruism
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12. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 67 > Issue: 1
Ausonio Marras Audi on Substantive vs Instrumental Rationality
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13. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 67 > Issue: 1
Robert Audi Experience and Inference in the Grounding of Theoretical and Practical Reasons: Replies to Professors Fumerton, Marras, and Sinnott-Armstrong
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review essays
14. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 67 > Issue: 1
Timothy O’Connor Understanding Free Will: Might We Double-Think?
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critical notices
15. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 67 > Issue: 1
Karsten B. Steuber Woodcutters and Witchcraft: Rationality and Interpretive Change in the Social Sciences
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16. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 67 > Issue: 1
Lorne Falkenstein Hume’s Reason
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17. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 67 > Issue: 1
Margaret Gilbert Complicity: Ethics and Law for a Collective Age
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18. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 67 > Issue: 1
Douglas McDermid Philosophy and Its Epistemic Neuroses
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19. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 67 > Issue: 1
Charles Taliaferro A Middle Way to God
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20. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 67 > Issue: 1
Robert C. Koons Physical Causation
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