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From Folk Psychology to Cognitive Science

The Case Against Belief
Autor: Stephen Stich
SKU: BOOKD90928

29.73   ( iva incluído )

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Descrição

The semantic content of mental states, especially of beliefs, thoughts, and desires, has been at the center of a rich measure of philosophical research.

Recently interest has been heightened by the possibility that cognitive science will systematise and build upon folk psychological generalisations concerning beliefs, desires, and so forth.

At times the philosophical literature on these topics has seemed confusing and obscure, full of bogs, shadows and curved mirrors. The exact nature of the lessons to be drawn from celebrated examples has remained frustratingly evanescent, and while intuitions about what content to ascribe under various conditions are ever available, they are strikingly nonuniform and unsystematic. By contras, reading Stick’s book is like finding the right adjustment on a microscope lens – objects come into focus, boundaries become clear, the salient is discernible from the trivial, and there is a principled coherence to the entire picture.

I see this book as a turning point in research on content and its proper role in psychological theory . . .