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articles
1. Croatian Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 8 > Issue: 3
Janet Levin Molyneux Meets Euthyphro: Does Cross-Modal Transfer Require Rational Transition?
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Many contemporary philosophers contend that a positive answer to Molyneux’s Question -- the question of whether a “man born blind and made to see” would be able to identify spatial figures, without touching them, on first viewing -- requires that there be a *rational connection* between the representations of those figures afforded by vision and by touch. This paper explores the question of what this could mean if the representations are non-discursive, or “pure recognitional” concepts, and argues that the most plausible answer to this question can be invoked to resolve analogous questions about the individuation of phenomenal concepts.
2. Croatian Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 8 > Issue: 3
Michael Watkins Intentionalism and the Inverted Spectrum
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Intentionalism holds that two experiences differ in their representational content if and only if they differ in phenomenal character. It is generally held that Intentionalism cannot allow for the possibility of spectrum inversion without systematic error, unless it abandons the idea that, for example, the qualitative character of color experience is inherited from the qualitative character of colors. The paper argues that the conjunction of all three -- the possibility of spectrum inversion, Intentionalism, and the inheritance thesis -- can be consistently, and plausibly, accepted.
3. Croatian Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 8 > Issue: 3
Sydney Shoemaker Self-Intimation
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The sense in which having the available belief that P gives one a reason for believing that one believes that P is just that if one has that available belief one is thereby justified, or warranted, in believing that one has it. In explaining why it is so it helps to bring in the notion of rationality. We noted earlier that it is a requirement of full human rationality that one regularly revise one’s belief system in the direction of greater consistency and coherence, and, as a condition of one’s being able to do this, that one have access to its contents and their relations to one another. Judging that one believes something when one does, and judging that one doesn’t believe something when one doesn’t, are manifestations of the satisfaction of this requirement of rationality. That seems a sufficient reason to say that one is warranted in doing so.
4. Croatian Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 8 > Issue: 3
Joseph Levine Demonstrative Concepts
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Recently philosophers have appealed to the notion of a “demonstrative concept” to solve various puzzles. McDowell employs it to support his view that perceptual experience is conceptual, and Loar and others use it to provide an account of phenomenal concepts. The idea is that some concepts acquire their contents through demonstrations. I argue that there is no legitimate notion of demonstrative concept that can do this job.
5. Croatian Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 8 > Issue: 3
Gábor Forrai Conceptual Role Semantics and Naturalizing Meaning
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In this paper I will do three things. One, to explain why conceptual role semantics seems an attractive theory of meaning (I). Two, to sketch a version of it which has a good chance of withstanding some of the standard objections (II-III). Three, to see what follows from this version with respect to the naturalization of meaning (IV).
discussion
6. Croatian Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 8 > Issue: 3
Dunja Jutronić Reference Borrowing and the Role of Descriptions
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In this exchange with Michael Devitt on reference borrowing I continue to challenge the idea that reference borrowing is a purely causal process and suggest instead that reference borrowing involves the borrowers having to associate the correct categorial term and have some true beliefs about the referent in the guise of some associate description. I strengthen my defense by suggesting that other kind terms form the core of our language and this is where we associate true categorial descriptions and where error would matter. I also argue that in reference borrowing there is no need to posit a difference between proper names and natural kind terms on one hand and other kind terms on the other. If the traditional views of reference borrowing have demanded too much of individual speakers, the causal picture surely demands too little. Mere causal connection to some antecedent tradition of term use does not suffice for the preservation of reference.
7. Croatian Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 8 > Issue: 3
Michael Devitt Reference Borrowing: a Response to Dunja Jutronić
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In “Reference Borrowing and the Role of Descriptions,” Dunja Jutronić criticizes my view of the borrowing of names and natural kind terms. These terms should be treated, she argues, in the same way as I have tentatively suggested kind terms like ‘sloop’ should be: borrowers need to associate a categorial description that is true of the referent. I am not persuaded. Still, perhaps the suggestion should be extended to these terms anyway. I propose a way to test whether it should that does not rest on intuitions about reference.
book discussion
8. Croatian Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 8 > Issue: 3
Nenad Miščević Apriority, Copernican Turn and Objectivity
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book reviews
9. Croatian Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 8 > Issue: 3
Dunja Jutronić Hrvatski na uvjetnoj slobodi: Jezik, identitet i politika izmedu Jugoslavije i Europe: (Croatian Language on Parole: Language, Identity and Politics between Yugoslavia and Europe)
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10. Croatian Journal of Philosophy: Volume > 8 > Issue: 3
Tamara Dobler Thought’s Footing: A Theme in Wittgenstein’s Philosophical Investigations
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