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Philosophy 158Externalism about the Mind |
Asst. Prof James Pryor Dept. of Philosophy |
- James Pryor
Nowadays, many philosophers reject that picture. They accept some form of externalism about the mind. Externalism says that what one is thinking at any given moment will not just depend on how things are inside one's mind. It will also depend on what sort of environment one is in, and who one has communicated with.
In this proseminar, we will examine the main arguments for and against externalism, and consider what the consequences of externalism would be.
In addition, you will have to answer questions each week on the readings we will be discussing. (Your answers will be due BEFORE we discuss the readings. The point of answering these questions is to prepare you for the discussion.)
Date | Readings |
---|---|
Mon 2/8 |
Introduction |
Mon 2/15 |
Presidents' Day (No class) |
Mon 2/22 |
Putnam, "The Meaning of 'Meaning'" |
Mon 3/1 |
Putnam, "The Meaning of 'Meaning'" (continued) Putnam, Representation and Reality, Ch. 2 |
Mon 3/8 |
Burge, "Individualism and the Mental" |
Mon 3/15 |
Kripke and indexicals |
Mon 3/22 |
Kripke and indexicals (continued) |
Mon 3/29 |
Spring Break (No class) |
Mon 4/5 |
Burge, "Other Bodies" |
Mon 4/12 |
LePore and Loewer, "Solipsistic Semantics" Putnam, Representation and Reality, Ch. 3 |
Mon 4/19 |
Kripke on Pierre |
Mon 4/26 |
Loar, "Social Content and Psychological Content" Stalnaker, "Narrow Content" |
Mon 5/3 |
Slack |
Created by: James Pryor