Mind and PhilosophersVanderbilt University Press, 1987 - 244 strán (strany) The essays collected in this volume and written between 1959-1980 clearly belong to professional philosophy in both tone and context. Yet their ultimate aim is to explore larger problems and to set the groundwork for dealing with them. For the focus of attention throughout is human nature, not so much in the details of its structure or its social and moral manifestations as in its most general features and constituents. What sort of beings we are and how mind and body are related is the question at the very core of all inquiries into human nature. |
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Obsah
Introduction | 1 |
234 | 14 |
with Michael P Hodges | 35 |
Two Concepts of | 53 |
The Proofs of Realism | 89 |
Belief Confidence and Faith | 141 |
10 | 148 |
Peirce Santayana and the Large Facts | 157 |
Hume on Belief | 170 |
2345 | 188 |
13 | 203 |
14 | 213 |
SelfIdentity without a Self | 227 |
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action activity adequate animal faith appears argument attempt Baylis body C. D. Broad causal cause claim cognitive color commitment concept consciousness counterintuitive critical realist distinction dualistic epiphenomenalism epiphenomenalist evidence existence experience external fact Fichte Fichte's G. E. Moore George Santayana human Hume Hume's Ibid ideal identity important impotence hypothesis impressions intent interest J. G. Fichte knowledge least lively idea logical maintain material matter means mental acts mental events mind mind-body mind-body problem moral nature notion occur ontological organism passive Peirce perceived phenomenal quality philosophy philosophy of mind physical events physical objects position possible postulation present primordial principle problem proposition psyche raw feels realism reality realm reason reference relation sciousness self-identity semantic sense simply sort spirit substance suppose symbolic T. H. Huxley tayana things thought tion tokening behavior true truth ultimate views of belief vivacity volition Weiss