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601. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 57 > Issue: 1
Eric T. Olson Was I Ever a Fetus?
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The Standard View of personal identity says that someone who exists now can exist at another time only if there is continuity of her mental contents or capacities. But no person is psychologically continuous with a fetus, for a fetus, at least early in its career. has no mental features at all. So the Standard View entails that no person was ever a fetus---contrary to the popular assumption that an unthinking fetus is a potential person. It is also mysterious what does ordinarily happen to a human fetus, if it does not come to be a person. Although an extremely complex variant of the Standard View may allow one to persist without psychological continuity before one becomes a person but not afterwards, a far simpler solution is to accept a radically non-psychological account of our identity.
602. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 57 > Issue: 1
Colin Cheyne Getting in Touch with Numbers: Intuition and Mathematical Platonism
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Mathematics is about numbers, sets, functions, etc. and, according to one prominent view, these are abstract entities lacking causal powers and spatio-temporal location. If this is so, then it is a puzzle how we come to have knowledge of such remote entities. One suggestion is intuition. But ‘intuition’ covers a range of notions. This paper identifies and examines those varieties of intuition which are most likely to playa role in the acquisition of our mathematical knowledge, and argues that none of them, singly or in combination, can plausibly account for knowledge of abstract entities.
603. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 57 > Issue: 1
Richard Rorty What Do You Do When They Call You a 'Relativist'?
604. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 57 > Issue: 2
David-Hillel Ruben John Searle’s The Construction of Social Reality
605. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 57 > Issue: 2
Charles Taliaferro, Patrick Richmond The Christian God
606. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 57 > Issue: 2
Barry Stroud Unpurged Pyrrhonism
607. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 57 > Issue: 2
Takashi Yagisawa Salmon Trapping
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Call a sentential context semantically transparent if and only if all synonymous expressions are substitutable for one another in it salva veritate. Nathan Salmon has boldly advanced a refreshingly crisp semantic theory according to which belief contexts are semantically transparent. If he is right, belief contexts are much better behaved than widely suspected. Impressive as it is, this author does not believe that Salmon’s theory is completely satisfactory. This article tries to show that Salmon’s theory, in conjunction with a number of auxiliary but important claims he makes to buttress the theory, seems to lead to failure of semantic transparency of belief contexts.
608. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 57 > Issue: 2
Louise M. Antony Feeling Fine About the Mind
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The article presents a critique of John Searle’s attack on computationalist theories of mind in his recent book, The Rediscovery of the Mind. Searle is guilty of caricaturing his opponents, and of ignoring their arguments. Moreover, his own positive theory of mind, which he claims “takes account of” subjectivity, turns out to offer no discernible advantages over the views he rejects.
609. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 57 > Issue: 2
Bernard Reginster Nietzsche on Ressentiment and Valuation
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The paper examines Nietzsche’s claim that valuations born out of a psychological condition he calls “ressentiment” are objectionable. It argues for a philosophically sound construal of this type of criticism, according to which the criticism is directed at the agent who holds values out of ressentiment, rather than at those values themselves. After presenting an analysis of ressentiment, the paper examines its impact on valuation and concludes with an inquiry into Nietzsche’s reasons for claiming that ressentiment valuation is “corrupt.” Specifically, the paper proposes that ressentiment valuation involves a form of self-deception, that such self-deception is objectionable because it undermines the integrity of the self, and that the lack of such integrity ensnares the agent in a peculiar kind of practical inconsistency. The paper ends with a brief review of the problems and prospects of this interpretation.
610. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 57 > Issue: 2
John R. Searle Responses to Critics of The Construction of Social Reality
611. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 57 > Issue: 2
William Hasker Explanatory Priority: Transitive and Unequivocal, a Reply to William Craig
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According to William Craig, the notion of explanatory priority is the Achilles’ heel of Robert Adams’ argument against Molinism. Specifically, Craig contends that (1) the notion of explanatory priority is employed equivocally in the argument; (2) Adams is guilty of conflating reasons and causes; and (3) one of the intermediate conclusions of the argument is invalidly inferred, as can be seen by a counterexample. I argue that Craig is mistaken on all counts, and that Adams’ argument emerges unscathed.
612. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 57 > Issue: 2
Fred Dretske So Do We Know or Don’t We?
613. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 57 > Issue: 2
T. L. S. Sprigge The Blindness of Modern Science
614. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 57 > Issue: 2
Recent Publications
615. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 57 > Issue: 2
Russ Shafer-Landau Through the Moral Maze: Searching for Absolute Values in a Pluralistic World
616. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 57 > Issue: 2
Norman S. Care Moral Perception and Particularity
617. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 57 > Issue: 2
Raimo Tuomela Searle on Social Institutions
618. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 57 > Issue: 2
Paul K. Moser The Relativity of Skepticism
619. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 57 > Issue: 2
Kent Bach Engineering the Mind
620. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 57 > Issue: 2
Robert J. Fogelin Précis of Pyrrhonian Reflections on Knowledge and Justification