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John McDowell (1) (1942–)

Autor(a) de Mind and World

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15+ Works 476 Membros 2 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

John McDowell is University Professor of Philosophy at the University of Pittsburgh.
Image credit: Philosopher John McDowell in Paris, Oct 2007, in front of the Librairie Philosophique J. Vrin. Photograph by A.Zielinska

Obras de John McDowell

Associated Works

Theaetetus [Greek and translation] (0360) — Tradutor, algumas edições977 cópias
Epistemology: An Anthology (2000) — Contribuinte — 186 cópias
Essays on Aristotle's Ethics (1980) — Contribuinte — 149 cópias
Virtue Ethics (1997) — Contribuinte — 129 cópias
The New Wittgenstein (2000) — Contribuinte — 56 cópias
Aristotle's Ethics: critical essays (1998) — Contribuinte — 26 cópias
Reading Putnam (2012) — Contribuinte — 11 cópias
Aristotle and Moral Realism (1995) — Contribuinte — 10 cópias
Ethics (Companions to Ancient Thought) (1998) — Contribuinte — 9 cópias
Reading Ethics (Reading Philosophy) (2008) — Contribuinte — 9 cópias

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Conhecimento Comum

Membros

Resenhas

This excellent book collects several of McDowell's essays on topics ranging from Aristotelian ethics, to Wittgenstein and rule following, to anti-reductionism and the philosophy of mind. There is a nice phenomenological strain running through the essays in this book (at least the ones I've read so far), which should make it appealing also to audiences more familiar with "continental" work.

In "Functionalism and Anomolous Monism" McDowell critiques another philosopher Loar who undertakes to provide a functionalist-reductionist account rejoinder to Davidson's claim that a physicalist reduction of the "'constitutive role played by rationality' in shaping our thoughts about propositional attitudes." The upshot of this essay is a persuasive argument not only against Loar's specific reduction, but against the possibility of any such reduction.
At the end of this essay, McDowell also makes some short remarks contra Davidson, arguing that if we accept the latter's critique of content-scheme dualism, we should be similarly critical of the Humean criticism of causality, given that the notion that "causes are not given in experience" relies on the undermined notion of (bare) experience. If we accept that singular causal relations *are* in fact given in experience, then we are no longer forced to see causality as necessarily nomological (consisting in a "suitable type of generality", i.e. lawlike). McDowell dubs this "fourth dogma of empiricism" the Prejudice of the Nomological Character of Causality.

Another important essay here is the one on Bernard Williams' arguments against external reasons, a paper from Ethics and the Limits of Philosophy that McDowell rightly says is under-appreciated. Briefly, McDowell's argument is that if we abandon the notion that the supporter of external reasons wants such reasons in order to be able to level a charge of irrationality against an agent who (purportedly) has an external reason to do something, but no internal reason (i.e. does not do it), then the notion of external reasons becomes much more palatable. McDowell also examines the requirement that the transition from not possessing to possessing an external reason (from it being external to it being internal) need be rational--what sort of requirement is this, and what sort of transitions (e.g. conversion experiences? education?) might it rule out?
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lukeasrodgers | May 5, 2011 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
15
Also by
13
Membros
476
Popularidade
#51,804
Avaliação
4.0
Resenhas
2
ISBNs
39
Idiomas
5
Favorito
1

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