Simple Mindedness: In Defense of Naive Naturalism in the Philosophy of Mind

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Harvard University Press, 1997 - Philosophy - 265 pages

How is our conception of what there is affected by our counting ourselves as inhabitants of the natural world? How do our actions fit into a world that is altered through our agency? And how do we accommodate our understanding of one another as fellow subjects of experience--as beings with thoughts and wants and hopes and fears? These questions provide the impetus for the detailed discussions of ontology, human agency, and everyday psychological explanation presented in this book. The answers offer a distinctive view of questions about "the mind's place in nature," and they argue for a particular position in philosophy of mind: naive naturalism.

This position opposes the whole drift of the last thirty or forty years' philosophy of mind in the English-speaking world. Jennifer Hornsby sets naive naturalism against dualism, but without advancing the claims of "materialism," "physicalism," or "naturalism" as these have come to be known. She shows how we can, and why we should, abandon the view that thoughts and actions, to be seen as real, must be subject to scientific explanation.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
Persons and Their States and Events
17
Descartes Rorty and the MindBody Fiction
24
Physicalism Events and PartWhole Relations
46
Which Physical Events Are Mental Events?
63
The Nomological Character
78
Bodily Movements Actions and Epistemology
93
Physicalist Thinking and Conceptions of Behaviour
111
Agency and Causal Explanation
129
Personal and Subpersonal Levels
157
Dennetts Naturalism
168
Causation in Intuitive Physics
185
Notes
223
References
253
Subject Index
261
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