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Anti-Externalism
Contributor(s): Mendola, Joseph (Author)
ISBN: 0199679681     ISBN-13: 9780199679683
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
OUR PRICE:   $36.09  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: May 2013
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Philosophy | Mind & Body
- Philosophy | Epistemology
- Philosophy | Metaphysics
Dewey: 128.2
Physical Information: 0.9" H x 6.1" W x 9.1" (1.15 lbs) 360 pages
 
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Publisher Description:
Internalism in philosophy of mind is the thesis that all conditions that constitute a person's current thoughts and sensations, with their characteristic contents, are internal to that person's skin and contemporaneous. Externalism is the denial of internalism, and is now broadly popular.
Joseph Mendola argues that internalism is true, and that there are no good arguments that support externalism.

Anti-Externalism has three parts. Part I examines famous case-based arguments for externalism due to Kripke, Putnam, and Burge, and develops a unified internalist response incorporating rigidified description clusters. It argues that this proposal's only real difficulties are shared by all viable
externalist treatments of both Frege's Hesperus-Phosphorus problem and Russell's problem of empty names, so that these difficulties cannot be decisive. Part II critically examines theoretical motivations for externalism entwined with causal accounts of perceptual content, as refined by Dretske,
Fodor, Millikan, Papineau, and others, as well as motivations entwined with disjunctivism and the view that knowledge is the basic mental state. It argues that such accounts are false or do not provide proper motivation for externalism, and develops an internalist but physicalist account of sensory
content involving intentional qualia. Part III critically examines theoretical motivations for externalism entwined with externalist accounts of language, including work of Brandom, Davidson, and Wittgenstein. It dialectically develops an internalist account of thoughts mediated by language that can
bridge the internally constituted qualia of Part II and the rigidified description clusters of Part I.