Formative Assessment: 2 x 1,500 word essays First essay due 16:00 on Friday 30 October 2015 Second essay due: 16:00 on Friday 11 December 2015

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PHILOSOPHY OF MIND: FALL 2015 (5AANB012) Credits: 15 units Tutor: Dr. Matthew Parrott Office: 603 Philosophy Building Email: matthew.parrott@kcl.ac.uk Consultation Hours: Tuesday 5-6 & Wednesday 3:30-4:30 Lecture Hours: 1-2 pm Tuesday, Room S -3.20 COURSE DESCRIPTION This course focuses on questions in the philosophy of mind. We will approach this topic by thinking through some problems that arise from reflecting on the metaphysics and epistemology of the mind. What is the mind? How does the mind relate to the brain? What is consciousness? How do we know about our own thoughts, feelings, and desires and how do we know about those of other people? In addressing these questions, we will cover topics central to contemporary philosophical discussions of the mind, including consciousness, intentional content, mental causation, and self-knowledge. OBJECTIVES 1) Understand key issues in the philosophy of mind. 2) Develop the ability to think carefully and critically about philosophical questions. 3) Develop skills in critical reading, writing, analytical thinking and in written and oral communication. ASSESSMENT Formative Assessment: 2 x 1,500 word essays First essay due 16:00 on Friday 30 October 2015 Second essay due: 16:00 on Friday 11 December 2015 Summative Assessment: 1 x 2 hour exam (100%) Time and Location TBD READING The readings for the course are separated into the following two categories: : reading that everyone who wants proper coverage of the subject must read. Further Reading: additional readings to help further develop your views on a particular subject. 1

Many of the readings for the course can be found either online (marked with a *) or in the following collection of essays: D. Chalmers (ed.): Philosophy of Mind: Classical and Contemporary Readings. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Another useful collection is: David Rosenthal (ed.): The Nature of Mind. Oxford: Oxford University Press. The following are good introductory texts for anyone seeking background knowledge: T. Crane: The Elements of Mind. Oxford: Oxford University Press. J. Kim: Philosophy of Mind (3rd edition). Boulder: Westview Press. SCHEDULE Week 1: The Mark of Mentality *T. Crane: 'Intentionality as the Mark of the Mental', in Anthony O'Hear (ed.), Contemporary Issues in the Philosophy of Mind. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. *R. Rorty: Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature, Chapter 1. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Further Reading J. Kim: 'Is there a "Mark of the Mental"?' from Chapter 1 of his Philosophy of Mind pp. 17-27. F. Brentano: 'The Distinction between Mental and Physical Phenomenon', in Chalmers. Week 2: Mind-Brain Identity *Smart, J.J.C., 1959, Sensations and Brain Processes, Philosophical Review, 68: 141 156. Also in Chalmers. *S. Kripke: Naming and Necessity, Lecture 3. London: Blackwell. *P. Churchland: 'Eliminative Materialism and the Propositional Attitudes' in Chalmers. *D. Stoljar: 'Physicalism', in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/physicalism/) *D. Papineau: Thinking about Consciousness, Chapter 1. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Week 3: Functionalism 2

*J. Levin: Functionalism in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/functionalism) *H. Putnam: 'The Nature of Mental States', in Chalmers. *D. Lewis: 'Psycho-physical and Theoretical Identifications', in Chalmers. *N. Block: 'Troubles with Functionalism', in his Readings in Philosophy of Psychology. Vol. 1. London: Methuen. Excerpt reprinted in Chalmers. *D. Lewis: 'Reduction of Mind', in S. Guttenplan (ed.), A Companion to the Philosophy of Mind. London: Blackwell. Week 4: Mental Causation *K. Bennett: 'Mental Causation', Philosophy Compass, 2, no. 2 (2007): 316-37. *J. Kim: Multiple Realization and the Metaphysics of Reduction, Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 52:1-26. *S. Yablo: 'Mental Causation', in Chalmers. *Antony, L. M., 1991, The Causal Relevance of the Mental: More on the Mattering of Minds Mind & Language, 6: 295 327. *D. Davidson: 'Mental Events', in Chalmers. Week 5: Consciousness *N. Block: 'On a Confusion about the Concept of Consciousness', in Chalmers. *T. Nagel: 'What it is Like to Be a Bat?' in Chalmers. *D. Dennett: 'Quining Qualia', in Chalmers. Hurley, S. 1998. Consciousness in Action. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. *Wilkes, K. V. 1984. Is consciousness important? British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, 35: 223 43. Week 6: Consciousness *F. Jackson: 'Epiphenomenal Qualia', in Chalmers. *D. Lewis: 'What Experience Teaches', in Chalmers. *J. Levine: 'Materialism and Qualia: The Explanatory Gap', in Chalmers. *B. Loar: 'Phenomenal States', in Chalmers. 3

*Gertler, B., 1999, A Defense of the Knowledge Argument. Philosophical Studies 93: 317 336. Week 7: Intentionality J. Fodor: 'A Theory of Content (I)', in his A Theory of Content and Other Essays. Cambridge: MIT Press. *D. Dennett: 'Intentional Systems', Journal of Philosophy, 68 (1971): 87-106. *R. Milliken: 'Biosemantics', in Chalmers. *Neander, K., 1995, Misrepresenting and Malfunctioning, Philosophical Studies, 79: 109 141. *F. Dretske: If you can t make one, you don t know how it works, Midwest Studies in Philosophy 19 (1):468-482 (1994) Week 8: Intentionality *H. Putnam: 'The Meaning of Meaning', in his Mind, Language and Reality, Philosophical Papers, Vol. 2, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Excerpt reprinted in Chalmers. *A. Clark and D. Chalmers: 'The Extended Mind' in Chalmers. *K. Farkas: 'What Is Externalism?', Philosophical Studies, 112 (2003). *F. Egan: How to Think About Mental Content. Philosophical Studies (2013) Week 9: Self-Knowledge *B. Gertler: Self-Knowledge in Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/self-knowledge/) *J. Heal: 'On First-Person Authority', Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society (102): 1-21. *G. Ryle: The Concept of Mind, Chapter 6. London: Penguin Books. Further Reading *S. Shoemaker: Self-Knowledge and 'Inner Sense', in his The First-Person Perspective and Other Essays. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. *A. Byrne: 'Introspection', Philosophical Topics, 33: 79-103. Week 10: Knowledge of others' minds *F. Dretske: 'Perception and Other Minds', Nous 7(1973): 33-44. *A. Gomes: 'Testimony and Other Minds', forthcoming in Erkenntnis. *B. Russell: 'Analogy' in Rosenthal. 4

A. Avramides: 'Other Minds', in B. McLaughlin, et. al., (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Mind. Oxford: Oxford University Press. *J. Smith: 'The Phenomenology of Face-to-face Mindreading', Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 87 (2013). QUESTIONS FOR FORMATIVE ESSAYS Essay 1 1) Are all of our concepts of mental states essentially functional concepts? 2) Is it right to think that pain, like every other mental state, exhibits intentionality? 3) If mental states supervene on physical states, does that mean that mental states do not really have any causal powers? 4) 'That everything should be explicable in terms of physics (together of course with descriptions of the ways in which the parts are put together-roughly biology is to physics as radio-engineering is to elector-magnetism) except the occurrence of sensations seems to me to be frankly unbelievable. (Smart) Discuss. 5) Evaluate Dennett s argument for the conclusion that consciousness has no special properties. Essay 2 6) If a scientist can stimulate the brain in such a manner as to generate thoughts, can an externalist account of mental content be correct? 7) In what sense, if any, does a person have authority for her own mental states? 8) What role, if any, do consumer systems play in connecting an intentional state to the thing that it represents? 9) Do we acquire knowledge of another person s mental state through testimony? 10) When Mary is let out of her black and white room, does she gain any phenomenal information? 5