A Short Commentary on The Concept of Mind |
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Page 55
... operations characteristic of man's imaginations , deliberations , anticipations etc. , i.e. operations which a man with certain dispositions and abilities can perform and which ... mental operations , i.e. operations ON SELF KNOWLEDGE 55.
... operations characteristic of man's imaginations , deliberations , anticipations etc. , i.e. operations which a man with certain dispositions and abilities can perform and which ... mental operations , i.e. operations ON SELF KNOWLEDGE 55.
Page 56
Archana Roy. required in all higher order mental operations , i.e. operations which while being episodic cannot be explained completely in terms of occurrences alone . If the knowledge of self to itself implies a readi- ness of mind to ...
Archana Roy. required in all higher order mental operations , i.e. operations which while being episodic cannot be explained completely in terms of occurrences alone . If the knowledge of self to itself implies a readi- ness of mind to ...
Page 110
... mental operations we need not pre - suppose any Cartesian self - illuminating consciousness . Yet this is what Ryle seems to have assumed unwarrantedly in his exposi- tion of various mental - conduct concepts and constrained sometimes ...
... mental operations we need not pre - suppose any Cartesian self - illuminating consciousness . Yet this is what Ryle seems to have assumed unwarrantedly in his exposi- tion of various mental - conduct concepts and constrained sometimes ...
Contents
On Descartes Myth | 1 |
On the Distinction Between Knowing how and Knowing what | 17 |
Dispositions and Occurrences 309 | 30 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
A. C. Ewing A. J. Ayer abilities absurd acting intelligently actions admit analysis argument behave belonging C. A. Mace capacity category mistake causal Concept of Mind conjoin or disjoin consciousness cycle deny Descartes difficult dispositional concepts dispositional property distinction dualism emotions entities episodic epistemologists everyday existence explained expression fact feelings G. E. Moore Gilbert Ryle heed human mind hypothetical statements Ibid imagination implies indicate individual individual's inference infinite regress intellectual operations introspection invariably involved know French know ourselves knowledge logical behaviour logical types meaning mental concepts mental operations mental-conduct concepts motives nature non-parallelism observable behaviour occult occurrences ordinary language overt behaviour particular perceiving perception performed philosopher's myth philosophers physical objects privileged access Prof reality reference rules Ryle holds Ryle observes Ryle's self-knowledge sensation and observation sense sense-data significant mental epithets species Stuart Hampshire supposed theory things thinking tion understanding various visualizing witness