Displaying: 681-700 of 2371 documents

0.35 sec

681. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 1
Stephen Darwall Expressivist Relativism?
682. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 1
Valerie Gray Hardcastle On the Matter of Minds and Mental Causation
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
There is a difference between someone breaking a glass by accidentally brushing up against it and smashing a glass in a fit of anger. In the first case, the person’s cognitive state has little to do with the event, but in the second, the mental state qua anger is quite relevant. How are we to understand this difference? What is the proper way to understand the relation between the mind, the brain, and the resultant behavior? This paper explores the popular “middle ground” reply in which mental phenomena are claimed to be “as real as” other higher level properties. It argues that this solution fails to answer epistemological difficulties surrounding how to chose the appropriate factors in an explanation. A more sophisticated understanding of scientific theorizing and of the relation between ontology and explanation give us a framework in which we can determine when we should refer to mental states as being the causally efficacious agents for some behavior.
683. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 1
Stewart Cohen Two Kinds of Skeptical Argument
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
This paper compares two kinds of epistemic principles---an underdetermination principle and a deductive closure principle. It argues that each principle provides the basis for an independently motivated skeptical argument. It examines the logical relations between the premises of the two kinds of skeptical argument and concludes that the deductive closure argument cannot be refuted without refuting the underdetermination argument. The underdetermination argument, however, can be refuted without refuting the deductive closure argument. In this respect, the deductive closure argument is the stronger of the two.
684. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 1
Judith Jarvis Thomson Reply to Critics
685. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 1
Nicholas L. Sturgeon Thomson Against Moral Explanations
686. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 1
Peter Railton Moral Explanation and Moral Objectivity
687. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 1
John Perry Broadening the Mind
688. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 1
Gilbert Harman Responses to Critics
689. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 1
Simon Blackburn Moral Relativism and Moral Objectivity
690. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 1
Judith Jarvis Thomson Précis of Part Two
691. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 1
William E. Mann Piety: Lending a Hand to Euthyphro
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
Many philosophers take the point of Plato’s Euthyphro to be an indictment of attempts to ground morality in religion, specifically in the attitudes of a deity or deities. It has been argued cogently in recent essays that Plato’s case is far from conclusive. This essay suggests instead that the Euthyphro can be read more narrowly as raising critical questions about a specific religious virtue, Piety. Then it presents the ingredients of a reply to those questions. The reply proceeds by suggesting that one need not accept the standards of definition used by Plato, and that one can provide an explanation of what Piety is by embedding Piety in a more comprehensive picture of the human, the divine, and the relations between the two. The picture makes use of a doctrine of divine sovereignty and a doctrine concerning love between God and humans.
692. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 1
John F. Post White Queen Psychology and Other Essays for Alice
693. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 1
Recent Publications
694. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 1
Martine Nida-Rümelin On Belief About Experiences: An Epistemological Distinction Applied to the Knowledge Argument Against Physicalism
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
The article introduces two kinds of belief-phenomenal belief and nonphenomenal belief---about color experiences and examines under what conditions the distinction can be extended to belief about other kinds of mental states. A thesis of the paper is that the so-called Knowledge Argument should not be formulated---as usual---using the locution of ‘knowing what it’s like’ but instead using the concept of phenomenal belief and explains why ‘knowing what it's like’ does not serve the purposes of those who wish to defend the Knowledge Argument. The article distinguishes two rival accounts of the phenomenal/nonphenomenal distinction and explains how the result of the Knowledge Argument depends upon which of these accounts one wishes to accept.
695. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 1
Robert Stalnaker Language in the World
696. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 1
Roy A. Sorensen Self-Strengthening Empathy
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
Stepping into the other guy’s shoes works best when you resemble him. After all, the procedure is to use yourself as a model: in goes hypothetical beliefs and desires, out comes hypothetical actions and revised beliefs and desires. If you are structurally analogous to the empathee, then accurate inputs generate accurate outputs---just as with any other simulation. The greater the degree of isomorphism, the more dependable and precise the results. This sensitivity to degrees of resemblance suggests that the method of empathy works best for average people. The advantage of being a small but representative sample of the population will create a bootstrap effect. For as average people prosper, there will be more average descendants and so the degree of resemblance in subsequent generations will snowball. Each increment in like-mindedness further enhances the reliability and validity of mental simulation. With each circuit along the spiral, there is tighter and tighter bunching and hence further empowerment of empathy. The method is self-strengthening and eventually molds a population of hyper-similar individuals---which partly solves the problem of other minds.
697. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 2
Anthony Brueckner Shoemaker on Second-Order Belief
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
In a number of papers, Sydney Shoemaker has argued that first-order belief plus rationality implies second-order belief. This paper is a critical discussion of Shoemaker’s argument.
698. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 2
Noam Chomsky Comments: Galen Strawson, Mental Reality
699. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 2
Christopher Peacocke Nonconceptual Content Defended
700. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research: Volume > 58 > Issue: 2
Robert Brandom Perception and Rational Constraint