Review from previous edition Truly Understood is an impressive exploration of the contours and promises of an important approach to thinking about concepts, one that deserves to have a lasting impact on philosophical thought.
D. Gene Witmer, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
In Truly Understood, Christopher Peacocke argues that truth and reference have a much deeper role in the explanation of meaning and understanding than has hitherto been appreciated. Examination of specific concepts shows that a grasp of these concepts has to be characterized in terms of reference, identity, and relations to the world. Peacocke develops a positive general theory of understanding based on the idea that concepts are individuated by their fundamental reference rules, which contrasts sharply with conceptual-role, inferentialist, and pragmatist approaches to meaning. He treats thought about the material world, about places and times, and about the self within the framework of this general account, and extends the theory to explain the normative dimensions of content, which he believes are founded in the network of connections between concepts and the level of reference and truth. In the second part of the book, Peacocke explores the application of this account to some problematic mental phenomena, including the conception of many subjects of experience, concepts of conscious states, mental action, and our ability to think about the contents of our own and others' mental states.
Les mer
What is it to be able to think about the material world, about oneself, and about other people? Christopher Peacocke argues that our concepts are to be explained in terms of the conditions in which they refer to aspects of the world. Reference and truth are fundamental in understanding.
Les mer
PART I: A THEORY OF UNDERSTANDING; PART II: APPLICATIONS TO MENTAL CONCEPTS
`Review from previous edition Truly Understood is an impressive exploration of the contours and promises of an important approach to thinking about concepts, one that deserves to have a lasting impact on philosophical thought.'
D. Gene Witmer, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
Les mer
Peacocke is one of the world's leading philosophers
An ambitious and original theory of concept possession
A compelling critique of rival treatments of thought
Essential reading for those working in the philosophy of mind and language
Les mer
Christopher Peacocke is Professor of Philosophy at Columbia University and Wollheim Professor of Philosophy at University College London.
Peacocke is one of the world's leading philosophers
An ambitious and original theory of concept possession
A compelling critique of rival treatments of thought
Essential reading for those working in the philosophy of mind and language
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780199581979
Publisert
2010
Utgiver
Oxford University Press
Vekt
569 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
155 mm
Dybde
22 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
356
Forfatter