Phenomenal Intentionality - Bibliography - PhilPapers.
The theories of the Big Four of collective intentionality -- Michael Bratman, Raimo Tuomela, John Searle, and Margaret Gilbert -- and the Big Five of Social Ontology -- which in addition to the Big Four includes Philip Pettit -- play a central role in almost all of these essays. Drawing on insights from a wide range of disciplines including dynamical systems theory, economics, and psychology.
Amazon.com: Phenomenal Intentionality (Philosophy of Mind) (9780199764297): Kriegel, Uriah: Books. With twelve new essays by philosophers at the forefront of the field, this volume is designed to launch this research program in a more self-conscious way, by exploring some of the fundamental claims and themes of relevance to this program. Enter your mobile number or email address below and.
Since the late seventies, the main research program for understanding intentionality has been based on the attempt to naturalize intentionality by identifying a natural relation that holds between internal states of the brain and external states of the world when and only when the former represent the latter. Call this the Naturalist-Externalist Research Program, or NERP.
Phenomenal Intentionality Meets the Extended Mind Terry Horgan and Uriah Kriegel, University of Arizona The Monist 91. phenomenal intentionality outlook, and in the next one a sixth. Although it is only the sixth tenet that bears directly on the central argument of the paper, we canvass the other five here for two reasons. First, doing so provides a more fleshed out contrast between the two.
Intentionality is the mind's ability to be of, about, or directed at things, or to say something. For example, a thought might say that grass is green or that Santa Claus is jolly, and a visual experience might be of a blue cup. While the existence of the phenomenon of intentionality is manifestly obvious, how exactly the mind gets to be directed at things, which may not even exist, is deeply.
Abstract Phenomenal intentionality is a view about the representational content of conscious experiences that grounds the content of experiences in their phenomenal character. The view is motivated.
Examples of how to use “intentionality” in a sentence from the Cambridge Dictionary Labs.