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Rules, Reason, and Self-Knowledge
Harvard University Press, 2012 Cloth: 978-0-674-06708-0 | eISBN: 978-0-674-06783-7 Library of Congress Classification BD418.3.T36 2012 Dewey Decimal Classification 128.2
ABOUT THIS BOOK | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Julia Tanney offers a sustained criticism of today’s canon in philosophy of mind, which conceives the workings of the rational mind as the outcome of causal interactions between mental states that have their bases in the brain. With its roots in physicalism and functionalism, this widely accepted view provides the philosophical foundation for the cardinal tenet of the cognitive sciences: that cognition is a form of information-processing. Rules, Reason, and Self-Knowledge presents a challenge not only to the cognitivist approach that has dominated philosophy and the special sciences for the last fifty years but, more broadly, to metaphysical-empirical approaches to the study of the mind. See other books on: Mind & Body | Philosophy of mind | Reason | Rules | Social Psychology See other titles from Harvard University Press |
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