Wittgenstein Meaning and Mind 2nd Edition by Peter Michael Stephan Hacker – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 1118951816, 9781118951811
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ISBN 10: 1118951816
ISBN 13: 9781118951811
Author: Peter Michael Stephan Hacker
Wittgenstein: Meaning and Mind is the third volume of a four-volume analytical commentary on Wittgenstein’s Philosophical Investigations, consisting of two parts. Part 1 is a sequence of fifteen essays that examine in detail all the major topics discussed in Philosophical Investigations §§243-427. These include the private language arguments, privacy, private ostensive definition, the nature of the mind, the inner and the outer, behaviour and behaviourism, thought, imagination, the self, consciousness, and criteria. Published in 1990 to widespread acclaim as a scholarly tour de force, the first edition of this volume of essays provides a comprehensive survey of these themes, the history of their treatment in early modern and modern philosophy, the development of Wittgenstein’s ideas on these subjects from 1929 onwards, and an elaborate analysis of his definitive arguments in the Investigations.
Wittgenstein Meaning and Mind 2nd Table of contents:
I Introduction to the private language arguments 1
1. The Augustinian conception of language and Wittgenstein’s early commitments 1
2. The place of the private language arguments in the Philosophical Investigations 9
3. The Great Tradition and its long shadow 13
4. From grammatical trivialities to metaphysical mysteries 16
5. The dialectic of the mental 21
II Only I can have 25
1. The traditional picture and its predicaments 25
2. Private ownership 28
3. Dispelling conceptual illusions and confusions 33
III Only I can know 41
1. The roots of the problem 41
2. Wittgenstein’s response to the classical conception 46
3. Wittgenstein’s sketchy account of knowledge 50
4. The cognitive network: connective analysis 54
5. A different route: the functions of the verb ‘to know’ 57
6. The temptations of the received view resisted 60
7. Further objections rebutted 64
IV Private ostensive definition 69
1. A ‘private’ language 69
2. Names, ostensive definitions and samples — a reminder 73
3. The vocabulary of a private language 76
4. Idle wheels 85
V Men, minds and machines 89
1. Human beings, their parts and their bodies 89
2. The mind 94
3. Only in the stream of life … 97
4. Homunculi and brains 100
5. Can machines think? 102
VI Avowals and descriptions 113
1. Descriptions of subjective experience 113
2. Descriptions 115
3. Natural expression 117
4. A spectrum of cases 121
VII Behaviour and behaviourism 127
1. Behaviourism in psychology and philosophy 127
2. Wittgenstein: first reactions 134
3. Crypto‐behaviourism? 142
4. Body and behaviour 146
VIII Knowledge of other minds: the inner and the outer 153
1. Semi‐solipsism 153
2. Inside and outside 155
3. The indeterminacy of the mental 161
IX An overview of the achievement of the private language arguments 167
1. An overview 167
2. Fundamental insights 173
3. Fidelity to philosophical methodology 180
4. Consequences and confusions 185
X Thinking: methodological muddles and categorical confusions 191
1. Thinking: a muddle elevated to a mystery 191
2. Methodological clarifications 194
3. Activities of the mind 196
4. Processes in the mind 202
XI Thinking: the soul of language 207
1. The strategic role of the argument 207
2. The dual‐process conception 212
3. Thought, language and the mastery of linguistic skills 219
4. Making a radical break 225
XII Images and the imagination 229
1. Landmarks 229
2. Seeing, imagining and mental images 236
3. Images and pictures 239
4. Visual images and visual impressions 243
5. Imagination, intention and the will 247
XIII I and my self 251
1. Historical antecedents 251
2. ‘The I, the I is what is deeply mysterious’ 255
3. The eliminability of the word ‘I’ 260
4. ‘“I” does not refer to a person’ 264
XIV The world of consciousness 271
1. The world as consciousness 271
2. The gulf between consciousness and body 275
3. The certainty of consciousness 281
XV Criteria 285
1. Symptoms and hypotheses 285
2. Symptoms and criteria 290
3. Further problems about criteria 295
4. Evidence, knowledge and certainty 301
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