[go: nahoru, domu]

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Noun

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philosophy of mind (countable and uncountable, plural philosophies of mind)

  1. (philosophy, uncountable) The area of philosophy which studies the nature and functions of the mind, thought, and consciousness, with attention to such topics as perception, reasoning, belief, memory, will, and identity.
    • 1982 November, Richard Rorty, “Contemporary Philosophy of Mind”, in Synthese, volume 53, number 2, page 325:
      Philosophy of mind, paradoxically enough, became an interesting area of philosophy only when philosophers began to stop taking the notion of "mind" for granted and began asking whether it was a misleading locution.
    • 2006 October, Jonathan Stoltz, “Sakya Pandita and the Status of Concepts”, in Philosophy East and West, volume 56, number 4, page 567:
      [T]he crux of the debate over concepts is really to be found within discussions of the philosophy of mind.
  2. (philosophy, countable) The views of a particular philosopher or philosophical movement concerning the matters studied within this area of philosophy.
    • 1932 September, Ledger Wood, “Descartes' Philosophy of Mind”, in The Philosophical Review, volume 41, number 5, page 466:
      Descartes is a thinker whose very reputation and influence have been serious obstacles to the correct understanding and interpretation of his doctrines . . . . This is preëminently true of his ‘philosophy of mind’, understanding by this expression his conception of the human mind, its nature and significance.
    • 1991 December, Mario Bunge, “A Philosophical Perspective on the Mind-Body Problem”, in Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, volume 135, number 4, page 518:
      Now we shall argue that science is relevant to philosophy and, in particular, to the problem of settling the disputes among the ten philosophies of mind outlined in the previous section.

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