METODO

International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

Series | Book

123722

Kluwer, Dordrecht

1979

312, xiii Pages

ISBN 978-94-009-9481-2

Synthese Library
vol. 138

Body, mind, and method

Essays in honor of Virgil C. Aldrich

Edited by

Donald Gustafson, Bangs Tapscott

Simple seeing. Plain talking. Language in use and persons in action. These are among the themes of Virgil Aldrich's writings, from the 1930's onward. Throughout these years, he has been an explorer of conceptual geography: not as a foreign visitor studying an alien land, but close up 'in the language in which we live, move, and have our being'. This is his work. It is clear to those who know him best that he also has fun at it. Yet,in the terms of his oft-cited distinction, it is equally clear that he is to be counted not among the funsters of philosophy, but among its most committed workers. Funsters are those who attempt to do epistemology, metaphysics, or analysis by appealing to examples which are purely imaginary, totally fictional, as unrealistic as you like, 'completely unheard of'. Such imaginative wilfullness takes philosophers away from, not nearer to, 'the rough ground' (Wittgenstein) where our concepts have their origin and working place. In the funsters' imagined, 'barely possible' (but actually impossible) world, simple seeing becomes transformed into the sensing of sense-data; plain talk is rejected as imprecise, vague, and misleading; and per­ sons in action show up as ensouled physical objects in motion. Then the fly is in the bottle, buzzing out its tedious tunes: the problem of perception of the external world; the problem of meaning and what it is; the mind-body problem. Image-mongering has got the best of image-management.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-9479-9

Full citation:

Gustafson, D. , Tapscott, B. (eds) (1979). Body, mind, and method: Essays in honor of Virgil C. Aldrich, Kluwer, Dordrecht.

Table of Contents

Simple seeing

Dretske Fred

1-15

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The unnaturalness of epistemology

Rorty Richard

77-92

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On the absence of phenomenology

Dennett Daniel

93-113

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On the absence of phenomenology

Dennett Daniel

93-113

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Wittgenstein on psychological verbs

Vesey Godfrey

115-127

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Agents, mechanisms, and other minds

Long Douglas C.

129-148

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Memory and causality

Munsat Stanley

167-177

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Calculations, reasons and causes

Canfield John V.

179-195

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Deterministic predictions

Tapscott Bangs

197-202

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Purposes and poetry

Gunderson Keith

203-224

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Beauty and sex

Sircello Guy

225-239

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Fictional objects

Howell Robert

241-294

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A biographical sketch

Aldrich Virgil C.

295-295

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