Bültmann & Gerriets
Meaning, Mind, and Action
Philosophical Essays
von Julia Tanney
Verlag: Anthem Press
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-1-83998-482-2
Erschienen am 12.07.2022
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 235 mm [H] x 157 mm [B] x 19 mm [T]
Gewicht: 548 Gramm
Umfang: 240 Seiten

Preis: 150,50 €
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Klappentext
Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis

Julia Tanney's Meaning, Mind, and Action challenges widely held presuppositions within philosophy in its classical 'analytic', 'naturalist', and 'cognitivist' forms. Beginning with canonical views in the philosophy of language and logic, the arguments are then applied to discussions of knowledge, action, causation, the nature of the mental, consciousness, and thinking.



Formerly Reader in Philosophy of Mind at the University of Kent, Julia Tanney, has been an independent researcher since 2015. Her first volume of essays, Rules, Reason, and Self-Knowledge was published in 2013. Tanney's work involves critical analyses of the metaphysical ideas and arguments that shape contemporary philosophy of mind, language, action-theory, knowledge, and meta-ethics. She is described as having an insider's grasp of theory with a depth and comprehensiveness to her arguments that make her criticism impossible to ignore. She is a leading expert on the philosophy of Gilbert Ryle and the later Wittgenstein.



Introduction; Part I¿Meaning and Philosophical Logic; Chapter One, Explaining What We Mean; Chapter Two Rule Following, Intellectualism, and Logical Reasoning: On the Importance of a Type Distinction between Performances and "Propositional Knowledge" of the Norms that Govern Them; Chapter Three, Wittgenstein on Rule Following and Interpretation; Part II¿Knowing, Action, and Causation, Chapter Four What Knowledge Is Not: Reflections on Some Uses of the Verb "To Know"; Chapter Five, Remarks on the "Thickness" of Action Description; Chapter Six, Prolegomena to a Cartographical Investigation of Cause and Reason; Part III¿Mind, Consciousness, and Thinking, Chapter Seven, The Location of the Mind; Chapter Eight, Some Absurdities in the Notion of "Conscious Experience"; Chapter Nine, "Ordinary" Consciousness; Chapter Ten, A Peg for Some Thoughts; Part IV¿The Logic of the Mental, Chapter Eleven, Rational Animals; Chapter Twelve, Investigating Cultures: A Critique of Cognitive Anthropology; Chapter Thirteen "The Colour Flows Back": Intention and Interpretation in Literature and Everyday Action; Chapter Fourteen Trauma and Belief; Acknowledgments; Provenance of Essays; Index.


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