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Displaying: 41-60 of 97 documents


book symposium:
41. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 3
Frank Jackson Causal Roles and Higher-Order Properties
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42. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 3
Ned Block Is Experiencing Just Representing?
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43. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 3
Sydney Shoemaker Two Cheers for Representationalism
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44. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 3
Michael Tye Response to Discussants
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review essays
45. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 3
Bernard Berofsky Through Thick and Thin: Mele on Autonomy
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46. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 3
Michael E. Bratman The Sources of Normativity
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critical notices
47. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 3
Frederick Stoutland Causality, Interpretation and the Mind
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48. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 3
Richard M. Gale Ontological Arguments and Belief in God
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49. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 3
Patrick Grim Beyond the Limits of Thought
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50. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 3
Keith Butler Cartesian Psychology and Physical Minds: Individualism and the Sciences of the Mind
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51. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 3
Philip L. Quinn Divine Discourse: Philosophical Reflections on the Claim That God Speaks
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52. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 3
Christopher W. Gowans Practical Guilt: Moral Dilemmas, Emotions, and Social Norms
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53. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 3
Malcolm Budd Music and Conceptualization
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54. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 3
Charles Landesman Colours: Their Nature and Representation
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55. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 3
Steven Hales, Rex Welshon Making Sense of Nietzsche: Reflections Timely and Untimely
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articles
56. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 2
Victor Caston Aristotle and the Problem of Intentionality
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Aristotle not only fonnulates the problem of intentionality explicitly, he makes a solution to it a requirement for any adequate theory of mind. His own solution, however, is not to be found in his theory of sensation, as Brentano and others have thought. In fact, it is precisely because Aristotle regards this theory as inadequate that he goes on to argue for a distinct new ability he calls “phantasia.” The theory of content he develops on this basis (unlike Brentano’s) is profoundly naturalistic: it is a representational theory, formulated in tenns of the causal powers and physical magnitudes of the body.
57. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 2
David Novitz Forgiveness and Self-Respect
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The aim of this paper is to explain what is involved in the exercise of the Judaeo-Christian virtue of forgiveness, and in so doing to lay bare the structure of human (rather than Divine) forgiveness. It argues that it is not possible, through some act of will, to forgive a person for the wrongs that have been done to one, but shows nonetheless that forgiving is a task and that the disposition to undertake this task in the appropriate circumstances may properly be regarded as a virtue. However, to be too willing to undertake this task, or to undertake it in inappropriate circumstances, is a vice since it is indicative of diminished self-respect. Success in the task of forgiving falls beyond our full rational control and depends very largely on a capacity to empathise and to feel an appropriate degree of compassion. Whether or not we are able to do so and sustain this itself depends on certain social contingencies.
58. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 2
Crawford L. Elder Essential Properties and Coinciding Objects
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How can a parcel of matter, or collection of particles, simultaneously compose three different objects, characterized by different modal properties? If the statue is gouged it still exists, but not exactly that piece of gold which originally occupied the statue’s borders, and the (mass of) gold within that piece can survive dispersal, while the piece cannot. The solution to this “problem of coinciding objects”, this paper argues, is that there is, in that space, only the statue. The properties which the piece and the mass supposedly must have, to go on being, are not properties which anything can have necessarily or essentially. Not even having that origin can be essential. There is no object of which the statue is composed, though there are objects (viz., gold atoms) and a kind of stuff (viz., gold) of which it is composed.
59. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 2
Rae Langton, David Lewis Defining ‘Intrinsic’
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Something could be round even if it were the only thing in the universe, unaccompanied by anything distinct from itself. Jaegwon Kim once suggested that we define an intrinsic property as one that can belong to something unaccompanied. Wrong: unaccompaniment itself is not intrinsic, yet it can belong to something unaccompanied. But there is a better Kim-style definition. Say that P is independent of accompaniment iff four different cases are possible: something accompanied may have P or lack P, something unaccompanied may have P or lack P. P is basic intrinsic iff (1) P and not-P are nondisjunctive and contingent, and (2) P is independent of accompaniment. Two things (actual or possible) are duplicates iff they have exactly the same basic intrinsic properties. P is intrinsic iff no two duplicates differ with respect to P.
60. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 2
Michael C. Rea In Defense of Mereological Universalism
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This paper defends Mereological Universalism (the thesis that, for any set S of disjoint objects, there is an object that the members of S compose. Universalism is unpalatable to many philosophers because it entails that if there are such things as my left tennis shoe, W. V. Quine, and the Taj Mahal, then there is another object that those three things compose. This paper presents and criticizes Peter van Inwagen’s argument against Universalism and then presents a new argument in favor of Universalism. It turns out that the most reasonable way to resist the argument for Universalism is to deny the existence of artifacts; thus, if we believe in artifacts, we have no real choice other than to embrace Universalism.