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Philosophy of Mind and Cognition: An Introduction Paperback – Illustrated, 1 December 2006
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- Ensures that the most recent developments in the philosophy of mind and cognitive science are brought together into a coherent, accessible whole.
- Revisions respond to feedback from students and teachers and make the volume even more useful for courses.
- New material includes: a section on Descartes’ famous objection to materialism; extended treatment of connectionism; coverage of the view that psychology is autonomous; fuller discussion of recent debates over phenomenal experience; and much more.
- ISBN-101405133244
- ISBN-13978-1405133241
- Edition2nd
- PublisherWiley-Blackwell
- Publication date1 December 2006
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions15.37 x 2.59 x 22.99 cm
- Print length352 pages
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From the Publisher
Frank Jackson is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Research School of Social Sciences at the Australian National University. He is the author of Conditionals (Blackwell, 1987) and his John Locke Lectures were published as From Metaphysics to Ethics in 1998.
From the Inside Flap
New material includes: a section on some of Descartes’ famous objections to materialism along with a discussion of the objection from Gödel’s theorem; substantial additions to the discussion of qualia including a discussion of representationalist accounts of experience and of the zombie argument; additional coverage of the view that psychology is autonomous; a new substantial chapter on connectionism and its bearing on the language of thought debate; and much more.
From the Back Cover
New material includes: a section on some of Descartes’ famous objections to materialism along with a discussion of the objection from Gödel’s theorem; substantial additions to the discussion of qualia including a discussion of representationalist accounts of experience and of the zombie argument; additional coverage of the view that psychology is autonomous; a new substantial chapter on connectionism and its bearing on the language of thought debate; and much more.
About the Author
Frank Jackson is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Research School of Social Sciences at the Australian National University. He is the author of Conditionals (Blackwell, 1987) and his John Locke Lectures were published as From Metaphysics to Ethics in 1998.
Product details
- Publisher : Wiley-Blackwell
- Publication date : 1 December 2006
- Edition : 2nd
- Language : English
- Print length : 352 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1405133244
- ISBN-13 : 978-1405133241
- Item weight : 499 g
- Dimensions : 15.37 x 2.59 x 22.99 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: 284,876 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- 221 in Cognitive Psychology Textbooks
- 315 in Humanist Philosophy
- 608 in Philosophy History Textbooks & Surveys
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MartaReviewed in Italy on 23 December 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars Molto utile
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseLibro molto utile per avere una visione d'insieme della filosofia della mente contemporanea. Il
Prezzo è un po' altino forse ma ne vale la pena !
- John FerngroveReviewed in the United Kingdom on 7 September 2011
4.0 out of 5 stars A pretty bumpy ride for an introduction
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseHaving already read Kim's excellent introductory Philosophy of Mind, I was under the naïve impression that I would have no further need of anything else in this subject with 'Introduction' in the title. It was only the indication in the book's table of contents that a section on modality and possible worlds was included that prompted me to acquire it. This was in the hope that it might help me get to the bottom of some of the asterisked sections in Chalmer's classic The Conscious Mind. As it happened, this book turned out to be a rather different sort of introduction to Kim's. Kim's presentation of the topic is admirably structured, outlining the terrain, and the key relationships within it, in a manner that allows more advanced material to be subsequently integrated into the picture with relative ease. The treatment here, however, is somewhat more sprawling, like that of a patchwork quilt, albeit covering a broader area. Some topics are examined in greater depth, some lesser. Many topics are outlined that don't appear in Kim at all. The book is largely structured around the authors' defence of the position known as `common-sense functionalism' which is broadly, insofar as I presently understand it, the position that our everyday mental concepts, such as belief and desire, are actual properties of actual minds that functionally cause our behaviour. This is as opposed, amongst other things, to being useful fictions that we have concocted to `explain' apparent patterns in other's behaviour.
In content this is a five-star book. It's all good stuff that anyone serious about the subject has got to get familiar with. As well as raising issues and introducing topics not covered in Kim's book, it also, just as interestingly, presented arguments and ideas familiar from Kim from alternative perspectives, causing one to reassess what one thought one already knew, and bringing fresh depth to questions one presumed were understood. However, despite reading the book very carefully, sentence by sentence, as this kind of material demands, it seemed to me there were too many occurrences of sentences that were just too ambiguous to guess their probable intended meanings from their context. Or worse still, sentences that just seemed to have no relevance to the context at all, implying that the reader should be bringing insights to that context that don't need to be spelled out. This tended to create an impression that the reader is being left to make the long range connections largely unassisted. All in all, this book seemed to be written more for the authors' peers than for the beginning student. One can never be sure in such circumstances whether one is simply encountering the limits of one's own intelligence. However, I have now read enough philosophy to warrant a small glimmer of confidence that the fault in these situations might not be entirely my own. More examples might have extended the length of the book a little, but added a great deal to its readability. Perhaps the idea is that grown up philosophers don't need to be mollycoddled with examples, but then this would pitch it at an intermediate rather than an introductory audience. I'm not saying this is an impossible book, for I certainly did get a lot out of it. But there were too many occasions where I had to let the thread go in the hope of picking it up again further down the line. As such, it made a difficult subject even harder.
My inclination is to give this three stars, but the content is too important and I've no idea, as yet, where else I would go to cover some of the material. Thus I'll graciously nudge it up to four. I've actually every expectation that I will read it again, in the hope of squeezing out another layer of meaning from it a second time around, but probably only after tackling some other `introductions' to the field. What I would say is that if you are new to the subject, and in search of an introduction then don't start here. Start with Kim.