Brian Beakley and Peter Ludlow, editors
THE PHILOSOPHY OF MIND READ ONLY TEXT
Apr 1992
ISBN 0-262-52167-9
449 pp. 25 illus.
$32.95/L22.50
(paperback)
PURCHASE
MAIN LIBRARY CATALOG
Preface
Sources and Acknowledgments
I The Mind/Body Problem
Introduction
1. From Metaphysics, book 7, and On the Soul, book 2. Aristotle.
2. Of Sense. Thomas Hobbes.
3. From Meditations II and VI and from Reply to Objections II. RenDescartes.
4. From The Principles of Human Knowledge. George Berkeley.
5. Of the Laws of Mind. John Stuart Mill.
6. Descartes' Myth. Gilbert Ryle.
7. Is Consciousness a Brain Process? U. T. Place.
8. From "Identity and Necessity". Saul Kripke.
9. From Language and Problems of Knowledge. Noam Chomsky.
10. The Nature of Mental States. Hilary Putnam.
11. Reductionism and Antireductionism in Functionalist Theories of Mind. Patricia Churchland.
12. Troubles with Functionalism. Ned Block.
13. Philosophy and Our Mental Life. Hilary Putnam.
II Mental Causation
Introduction
14. From The Phaedo. Plato.
15. From Passions of the Soul. RenDescartes.
16. From ''The Union of Soul and Body". Nicolas Malebranche.
17. The Nature and Communication of Substances. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz.
18. The Third Antinomy. Immanuel Kant.
19. On the Hypothesis That Animals Are Automata. Thomas Henry Huxley.
20. Mental Events. Donald Davidson.
21. Making Mind Matter More. Jerry A. Fodor.
III Mental Imagery
Introduction
22. That the Soul Never Thinks without an Image. Thomas Aquinas.
23. Of Imagination. Thomas Hobbes.
24. From Meditation VI and from Objection IV and Reply. RenDescartes.
25. Of the Ideas of the Memory and Imagination. David Hume.
26. Imagination. William James.
27. The Modern Psychology of Thinking. Oswald Kpe.
28. Image in Behavior. John Watson.
29. "The Theory of Special Status Pictures" and "Imagining". Gilbert Ryle.
30. The Nature of Images and the Introspective Trap. Daniel Dennett.
31. Mental Rotation of Three-Dimensional Objects. Roger Shepard and Jacqueline Metzler.
32. Scanning Visual Mental Images: The First Phase of the Debate. Stephen Kosslyn.
33. Tacit Knowledge and "Mental Scanning". Zenon W. Pylyshyn.
34. Demand Characteristics?: The Second Phase of the Debate. Stephen Kosslyn.
IV Associationism/Connectionism
Introduction
35. Of the Consequence or Train of Imaginations. Thomas Hobbes.
36. Of the Association of Ideas. John Locke.
37. Of the Connection or Association of Ideas. David Hume.
38. The Principal Investigations of Psychology Characterised. John Stuart Mill.
39. The Elementary Law of Association. William James.
40. The Appeal of Parallel Distributed Processing. James L. McClelland, David E. Rumelhart and Geoffrey E. Hinton.
41. Connectionism and Cognitive Architecture: A Critical Analysis. Jerry A. Fodor and Zenon W. Pylyshyn.
42. The Constituent Structure of Connectionist Mental States: A Reply to Fodor and Pylyshyn. Paul Smolensky.
43. One AI or Many? Seymour Papert.
V Innate Ideas
Introduction
44. From The Meno. Plato.
45. From ''Comments on a Certain Broadsheet". RenDescartes.
46. No Innate Principles in the Mind. John Locke.
47. The Psychogenesis of Knowledge and Its Epistemological Significance. Jean Piaget.
48. How There Could Be a Private Language and What It Must Be Like. Jerry A. Fodor.
49. On Cognitive Structures and Their Development: A Reply to Piaget. Noam Chomsky.
50. What Is Innate and Why: Comments on the Debate. Hilary Putnam.
51. Discussion of Putnam's Comments. Noam Chomsky.
52. Reply to Putnam. Jerry A. Fodor.
Index
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