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Proceedings And Addresses Abstracts of Colloquium Papers
Scott Anderson, University of British Columbia In this essay, I argue that recent accounts
of coercion can be mapped onto two different axes: whether they focus
on the situation of the coercee or the activities of the coercer,
and whether or not they depend upon moral judgments in their analysis
of coercion. I argue that almost no recent theories have seriously
explored a non-moralized, coercer-focused approach to coercion. I
offer some reasons to think that a theory in this unexplored quadrant
offers some important advantages over theories lodged in the other
quadrants. In particular, I suggest that it is crucial to thought
about coercion to focus on the willingness and ability of the coercer
to use his powers against the coercee.
Environmental Damage and the Puzzle of the
Self-Torturer (IV-G) Chrisoula Andreou, University of Utah But, as can be seen via consideration of the
puzzle of the self-torturer, conduct of the relevant sort can flourish
even in the absence of interpersonal conflicts. In particular, in
cases where individually negligible effects are involved, an agent,
whether it be an individual or a unified collective, can be led down
a course of destruction simply as a result of following its informed
and perfectly understandable but intransitive preferences. It follows
from the reasoning in my paper that being sympathetic and well-informed
may not be enough to prevent us from destroying the earth. We may
also need to settle on sub-optimal options that are within the range
of acceptable. If we don't, we will arguably end up stuck with sub-optimal
options that are well outside the range of acceptable.
Is Feeling Pain the Perception of Something?
(VI-G) Murat Aydede, University of Florida According to the increasingly popular perceptual/representational
accounts of pain, feeling pain in a body region is perceiving a non-mental
property or some objective condition of that region, typically equated
with some sort of (actual or potential) tissue damage. This paper
examines some of the main difficulties for such views that naturally
stem from our ordinary conception of pain and tentatively concludes
that the defenders of these views have not yet adequately solved them.
The tentative nature of the conclusion is meant to highlight the exploratory
nature of the discussion; thus, the arguments presented here against
perceptual accounts are meant to pose challenges for their defenders-challenges
that have yet to be met.
Horkheimer's Materialist Stance (III-H) J.C. Berendzen,
Loyola University of New Orleans For many, the word "materialism"
refers to a metaphysical position, but for critical theory, springing
from the work of Marx, materialism is different. Marxian materialism,
as developed in Max Horkheimer's critical theory, foregoes metaphysical
theorizing in favor of social research that focuses on people's lived
circumstances, especially suffering. One may argue, however, that
critical theory should still recognize its material ontological commitments.
But if we see Horkheimer as using a materialist stance, using the
notion of stance developed by Bas van Fraassen, we can make sense
of the materialist rejection of metaphysics. The critical theory which
comes out of the materialist stance should be seen not as merely ignoring
metaphysical underpinnings that should be investigated. The rejection
of metaphysics is not the rejection of theory; rather, it is the acceptance
that theory begins from a particular value-driven standpoint that
cannot be ontologically grounded.
Re-Writing the Transcendental Moment: Merleau-Ponty
on Novel Expression and Rationality (V-G) Kirk Besmer, Gonzaga University I present Merleau-Ponty's account of novel
expression, developed in the middle period of his career, as a response
to a long-standing problem for phenomenology, namely articulating
how natural language can be transformed to adequately express transcendental
insights. I argue that by integrating Saussurian linguistics with
the phenomenological concepts of the "living present" and
"evidential motivation," Merleau-Ponty articulates an account
of language that provides for the possibility of novel expression
whereby language escapes its historical conditioning to express new
truths. I conclude by claiming that Merleau-Ponty's account of novel
expression is nothing less than a re-writing of the transcendental
moment, which is no longer the privilege of the properly purified
transcendental ego but belongs to the speaking subject fully at home
a living, natural language.
Putting Zombies to Rest: The Role of Dynamics
in Reduction (III-F) Peter Bokulich, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology I argue that property dualism is not supported
by the purported logical possibility of qualitative zombies. Chalmers's
analysis of the logical supervenience of ordinary macroscopic facts
on microphysical facts fails to account properly for causal properties.
His arguments rely too heavily on kinematic facts and thereby obscure
the dynamical facts at the macroscopic and microscopic levels. A proper
analysis of the relation between causal and dynamical properties at
different levels reveals that we can only imagine qualitative zombies
if we beg the question against qualia being physical.
Surface Externalism: Confronting the Dark
Side of Twin Earth (III-F) David Bourget, University of Toronto This paper is a response to a recurrent criticism
of Putnam's Twin Earth argument for externalism. Imaginative thought
experiments suggest that
Axiomatic Boethius vs. Dialectical Aquinas
in De Hebdomadibus (VI-F) Carlos Bovell, Institute for Christian Studies Although Boethius and Aquinas share many things
in common with respect to their understandings of the relationship
between philosophy and theology, an examination of Boethius's De Hebdomadibus
and Aquinas's An Exposition of the "On the Hebdomads" of
Boethius shows that there remain significant differences between them.
The differences include different understandings of the types and
roles of proof appropriate to theology; different conceptions of the
limits of philosophy for theological reflection; and different understandings
of the nature of theology. All three of these are illustrated in this
essay during the course of an exposition of the horns of a dilemma
that Boethius sets up toward the beginning of his third theological
tractate.
Russell's Theory of Descriptions vs. the Predicative
Analysis: A Reply to Graff (I-H) Berit Brogaard, University of Missouri_St.
Louis In "Descriptions as Predicates'' Delia
Graff argues against Russell that descriptions should not be treated
as quantified noun phrases but rather as complex predicate expressions.
To support this claim, she first argues that predicative descriptions
do not give rise to the sorts of scope ambiguities they would give
rise to if they were quantifiers. She then argues that a predicative
semantics, unlike a quantificational semantics, does not require us
to posit an ambiguity in the indefinite and definite articles of descriptions.
In this paper, I present a number of objections to Graff's results,
based on a reassessment of the data.
Chasing Chimeras: Aesthetic Constructions
of the Animal (IV-E) Brett Buchanan, DePaul University In this paper, I examine the writings of Derrida
and Kofman to locate how they each speak of the animal's gaze. I begin
by briefly addressing the animal's face, particularly as posed by
Levinas, but then turn to Derrida's analyses in his essay "The
Animal that Therefore I Am (More to Follow)." The themes I follow
concern how we "named" the animal, how the animal's gaze
illustrates "our" human nudity and innocence before the
animal, the shame and embarrassment "we" feel when confronted
with the questioning animal, and how the animal's gaze mirrors our
own selves as human animals. I then turn to Kofman's analysis of a
painting by Balthus in her book Mélancholie de l'art. This
painting picks up many of the above themes, all of which revolve around
the issue of how we see ourselves, literally and figuratively, in
relation to the animal's gaze.
Kant on the Diabolical Will: A Neglected Alternative?
(III-G) Matthew Caswell, Boston University Kant's prohibition on diabolical agency turns
on the necessary conditions of accountable immorality. That is, because
freedom and moral obligation reciprocally entail each other, a diabolical
agency "exempt" from the moral incentive could not be held
accountable, and thus could not count as evil. But this appears to
leave open a neglected alternative: Couldn't a will subject to moral
obligation nevertheless subordinate its moral interest to a love of
evil for its own sake? I show that this possibility can be excluded
upon consideration of the logic of rational agency. Kant's opposition
to the demonization of evil is thereby vindicated.
Vice Versa (VI-H) Dale Clark, University of Utah In her book Uneasy Virtue, Julia Driver presents
an account of virtue according to which certain character traits are
morally virtuous when they generally lead to good consequences for
society. Various philosophers have taken Driver to task over this
account of virtue, which she terms "pure evaluational externalism."
One concern is that in accepting Driver's account of virtue one embraces
the idea that if the world were drastically different, traits traditionally
understood as pernicious would be virtuous. It may even turn out that
in our own world some of our more repugnant character traits have
simply been misunderstood. While these writers have speculated as
to the forms such nouveau virtues might take, the purpose of this
essay is actually to identify just such a new virtue, in the very
world in which we live.
"Predicates and Properties" (I-H)
Anthony Corsentino, Harvard University This paper discusses a question of considerable
recent interest in the philosophy of language: whether predicates
of ordinary language manifest contentual context-dependence. Contextualist
treatments of a predicate maintain that its literal content varies
from one context of use to another, either in accordance with lexical
principles (as semantic contextualists maintain), or in ways that
are linguistically uncontrolled (as pragmatic contextualists maintain).
The standard alternative to contextualism is implicaturism, which
holds that what varies with context is not the predicate's literal
content, but what its use additionally conveys. "Predicates and
Properties'' briefly surveys the reasons for adopting these approaches
and raises objections to each. It then proposes an alternative account
of predicate context-dependence, whose cardinal feature is its rejection
of an assumption that the competing approaches share and is responsible
for their defects: viz., that the literal content of a predicate determines
its extension.
The Worldly and Human Significance of Art:
An Exercise in Understanding through Arendt and Gadamer (I-G) James Couch, Southern Illinois University The paper being submitted concerns the importance
of the work of art for Hannah Arendt. Looking at the dangerous tendency
of mass society to
Gossip and Higher-Order Intentionality (VI-H)
Margaret Cuonzo, Long Island University In contrast to recent attempts to redeem gossip
from its long-standing characterization as an immoral activity, gossip
in this essay is shown to involve a subtle form of deception. Central
to the present account is an analysis of the speaker's intentions,
in particular what the speaker believes the subject of the gossip
would like to be revealed, as well as the speaker's own disinclination
to engage in gossip in the presence of the subject of the discussion.
This account is supported by intuitions that, seemingly, any competent
speaker of a natural language would share, Gricean rules for communicative
success, the pertinence of moral claims to gossip, and, finally, some
recent work on the evolution of language. Such a view has some interesting
consequences, such as that gossip turns out to be an activity that
can only be justified in terms of its consequences and the limited
options of its users. In addition, gossip need not be thought to refer
to "personal" or "private" topics of conversation.
Numbers and Electrons (II-G) Cian Dorr, University of Pittsburgh Someone who doesn't believe in subatomic particles
can "explain" all the facts putatively explained by subatomic
particles by appeal to the theory that as far as non-subatomic particles
are concerned, it is as if a given theory of the subatomic were true.
Likewise, a nominalist can "explain" all the facts putatively
explained by numbers by appeal to the theory that if such- and-such
mathematical axioms were true and the concrete world were just as
it actually is, such-and-such platonistic theory would be true. Give
the similarities between these theories, one might suppose that the
latter theory must be just as worthless as an explanation as the former.
I argue that this is a mistake: it misses an epistemologically important
difference between necessity-like operators and possibility-like operators.
Is There Something It is Like? (VI-G) Simon Evnine, University of Miami In this paper, I argue that there are problems
in understanding Nagel's notion that there is something that it is
like to be a bat, or a human. Various models are explored for attempting
to make sense of it. "There is something it is like to be an
S" might simply be a pleonastic transformation of "Ss have
conscious experiences." In that case, however, the "what
it is like" will not have the requisite ontological depth to
sustain Nagel's claims about it. It might be a brute fact, but that
is mysterious. Finally, I explore whether it can be shown to be related
to the "what it is like"s of an S's sensory experiences.
But this avenue too runs into problems.
The Neutrality of Rightness and the Indexicality
of Goodness: Beyond Objectivity and Back Again (II-E) Iskra Fileva, Boston University According to objectivist moral theories the
viewpoint which an individual has to adopt in deciding how to act
is the objective viewpoint, the questions, "What should I do?"
and "What is the right thing to do objectively speaking?"
are, according to such theories, one and the same question. Critics
have charged that purely objective reasoning in practical matters
is impossible for humans, or else is undesirable because too cold
or else is too demanding.
Too Much Reference: Semantics for Multiply
Signifying Terms (IV-H) Greg Frost-Arnold, University of Pittsburgh The logic of singular terms that refer to
nothing, such as "Santa Claus," has been studied extensively
under the heading of free logic. The present essay examines expressions
whose reference is defective in a different way: they signify more
than one entity. The bulk of the effort is directed at developing
an acceptable formal semantics based upon an informal and intuitive
idea introduced by Field (1973) and discussed by Camp (2001); their
basic strategy is to use supervaluations. Their idea, as it stands,
encounters serious difficulties, but with suitable refinements it
can be salvaged. Two other options for a formal semantics of multiply-signifying
terms are also presented. Finally, the relative merits of the three
semantics are briefly discussed.
Dilemmas of Rawlsian Opportunity (I-I) Paul Gomberg, Chicago State University There are widespread and deep inequalities
of opportunity that particularly affect black people in the United
States. White people are twice as likely as black people to graduate
from college. At every level of educational attainment black men earn
much less than white, and the gap is greater for more educational
men. Most of this difference seems due to differences in people's
occupations; black workers are over represented in lower paying jobs.
Can philosophical theories of justice speak to these issues? It would
seem that John Rawls's theory of justice, though ideal theory, might
provide an expressive basis for rejecting racial inequalities of opportunity,
perhaps as a special class of class inequalities. However, Rawls does
not reject all class-based effects on life prospects.
Jankélévitch and the Question
of Music (IV-F) Michael Greene, Bradley University In Europe Jankélévitch along
with Bloch and Adorno are widely regarded as the three most important
twentieth century philosophers of musical aesthetics, but while Bloch
and Adorno are familiar to Americans interested in musical theory,
Jankélévitch's thought is largely unknown. One of the
most commonly employed metaphors for music is language, and in Music
and the Ineffable, Jankélévitch challenges this metaphor,
showing how it obscures music's power and charm. Contrasting music
with language, Jankélévitch argues that music is inexpressive,
but not because it expresses nothing but that it expresses nothing
in particular, implying innumerable possibilities of interpretation,
leaving us free to choose. Jankélévitch emphasizes the
relation between music and time, arguing that there is something about
music, like time, that is ineffable, and he examines how those who
claim to find metaphysical significance in music ignore what is essential
about music.
The Will as Reason (V-E) Pamela Hieronymi, University of California_Los
Angeles I hope here to defend an account of the will
as "reason in its practical employment," against a view
of the will as an independent capacity for choice. Certain commonplaces
seem to reveal the need for an independent faculty of will, to execute
judgment in action. However, I will argue that if we think of the
will as an independent faculty, we have difficulty accounting for
the particular ways in which we are answerable for our willing. Fortunately,
we can accommodate the commonplaces and avoid the difficulties by
abandoning the assumption that practical reasoning concludes in a
judgment. Rather, reasoning which concludes in judgment-reasoning
directed at the question of whether p-is theoretical reasoning. Reason
in its practical employment is directed at the question of whether
to f; it concludes, not in a judgment about f-ing, but rather in an
intention to f.
Berkeley on "All the Dispute is about
a Word" (II-F) Marc Hight, Hampden-Sydney College In the Three Dialogues between Hylas and Philonous,
Berkeley makes the rather surprising claim that there is no significant
distinction between the various qualitatively identical ideas had
by distinct finite minds. Disputes about whether distinct finite minds
perceive the (numerically) same idea are philosophically idle. This
passage is generally regarded as an ill-considered muddle. In this
paper, I argue that Berkeley is trying to make a sophisticated distinction
that makes sense within the confines of his immaterialist metaphysics.
Berkeley invokes a concept I call non-definite distinctness. There
are certain sorts of distinctions that, even if metaphysically true,
have no practical consequences if you are an immaterialist. I conclude
the paper by noting two applications for the distinction within Berkeley's
immaterialist system.
Self-Ownership and Coercion (II-H) Robert Hughes, University of California_Los
Angeles Many libertarians accept the self-ownership
principle, which is a moral prohibition on most uses of force. In
particular, self-ownership prohibits governments from forcibly interfering
with people making promises and agreements. If libertarians accept
the self-ownership principle because they believe it protects people's
autonomy, presumably they believe it is acceptable for governments
to interfere with serious forms of coercion (e.g., coercion involving
threats to life). Robert Nozick, a notable libertarian, argued plausibly
in one of his early articles that a statement that looks superficially
like an offer can constitute a serious coercive threat. Governments
cannot protect people from such coercive threats without placing limits
on their freedom to make promises and agreements. So considerations
of autonomy cannot be used to motivate a right-wing libertarian view
based on the self-ownership principle, such as Nozick's view in Anarchy,
State, and Utopia.
Intellectual Akrasia: Universal Cause and
Action in Aristotle's Poetics (V-H) Jolanta Jaskolowska, Lexington College Aristotle argues in the Poetics that poetic
composition is more philosophical and more serious than historical
writing because it addresses the universal instead of the particular.
I argue that the greater universality with which the poet and the
spectator understand the action in tragedy is a function of how the
poetic composition removes the agent as the formal and efficient cause,
substituting an alternative final cause for the action other than
the one enunciated by the protagonist. I conclude that this change
in our understanding comes about through the reversal of fortune,
making the poetic inference a kind of post hoc propter hoc fallacy
in which the agency of the protagonist is replaced by a universal
sense of providential justice, a conclusion similar in its criticism
of poetic reasoning to the Medieval Arab commentators on Aristotle.
Rethinking "The Circumstances of Global
Justice Non-ideal Conditions (I-I) Hye-ryoung Kang, University of Colorado_Boulder In this paper, I am concerned with what kind
of circumstances of justice obtain in the current the global context.
Nationalism claims that circumstances of justice do not obtain in
the global context, and therefore there are no occasions for justice
across borders. Cosmopolitanism contends that the Rawlsian concept
of the circumstances of justice obtains across borders, and therefore
"cosmopolitan principles" are the best remedy in such circumstances
of justice. I argue that neither of these views is adequate to capture
the current circumstances of justice which are encountered by women
across the world, and that neither view is able to provide appropriate
remedies for injustice in the global context. I shall offer an alternative,
more empirically adequate account of the circumstances of global justice.
I will point out that, given this account of the actual circumstances
of justice, justice discourse should involve transnational transformative
and empowering remedies.
In Defense of Musical Ontology (IV-F) Andrew Kania, Trinity University Aaron Ridley has recently attacked the study
of musical ontology. He first argues that musical ontology has no
consequences for musical aesthetics or practice, and that no one is
in fact, or should be, puzzled by questions of musical ontology. Thus,
no one should engage in debate over questions of musical ontology.
He then argues that, contrary to musical ontologists' claims, the
ontological facts about music depend on facts about its value. I show,
first, that Ridley's main argument about the relationship between
musical ontology and value fails, since it equivocates on the notion
of the "content" of a musical work. Second, I show that
his subsidiary argument does not succeed, and that he fails even to
keep controversial ontological assumptions out of the very article
where he makes these claims. Third, I show how the ontology of music
can have important consequences for questions of musical value.
Indexicals and Modality (I-H) Tomis Kapitan, Northern Illinois University It is widely assumed that indexicals are directly
referential; their contribution to the truth-valued content of an
utterance are their referents only, and not features used to identify
referents, viz., meanings, characters, or modes of presentation. According
to David Kaplan, this thesis-henceforth, "DRI"-is allied
to the claims that indexicals designate rigidly, that the truth-valued
contents of utterances containing indexicals are singular propositions,
and that indexicals always take "primary scope" in combination
with modalities. I argue that by rendering indexicals modally inert,
an account based on DRI cannot accommodate the validity of inferences
expressed through indexical utterances. I propose an alternative account
that treats indexical tokens on a par with actualized indexical descriptions
that are, by that very fact, rigid, amenable to scope distinctions,
but not directly referential. Though singular propositions à
la Kaplan are abandoned, indexicals are given the modal respect they
deserve.
An Adverbial Theory of Numbers (II-G) Joongol Kim, Western Illinois University In this paper I prove a fundamental fact about
numbers that has been unduly ignored, namely that if there are exactly
m Fs and there are exactly n Fs, then m must be identical with n.
To that end, I present and develop an adverbial theory of numbers.
Freud Said-Or Simon Says? Informed Consent
and the Advancement of Psychoanalysis as a Science (IV-G) Hylarie Kochiras, University of North Carolina_Chapel
Hill Although human subject research requires voluntary
informed consent, psychoanalytic publications escape those requirements
by escaping the definition; they lack a systematic methodology. Psychoanalysis
instead retains its traditional practice, publishing case material
without patient knowledge or consent. Acknowledging risks to current
patients, analysts justify traditional practice as benefiting future
patients, by advancing
Locke on Substratum: A Deflationary Reading
(III-H) Daniel Z. Korman, University of Texas_Austin I defend an interpretation of Locke's remarks
on substratum according to which the substratum that supports an object's
sensible qualities just is the object itself and the support-relation
is the ordinary relation of instantiation. So, for instance, to say
that there is a substratum that supports redness and roundness is
just to say that there is a thing that has this color and this shape,
a thing that is red and round. There is no sense whatsoever in which
the substratum lacks sensible qualities. I show how this interpretation
(unlike leading interpretations) permits a satisfactory explanation
of the acquisition of both the idea of substratum and of the complex
ideas of substances within a Lockean framework. I then explain how
the alleged obscurity of the idea of substratum is to be understood
on the proposed interpretation. Oak Trees and Ashes: An Argument that Identity
is Vague and Non-Transitive (V-F) Courage without Fear (VI-H) Lawrence A. Lengbeyer, United States Naval
Academy Contrary to the Classical View of the virtue
of courage as a disposition to withstand and overcome reasonably experienced
fear, I argue that the only persons properly regarded as unqualifiedly
brave are those who experience no fear while handling fearsome circumstances.
However much we praise, and are impressed by, those who overcome their
fears, these persons are not exemplars of ideal courage, but occupy
an imperfect state that is somewhat defective. By a process of "shallow"
cognizing, the ideally or fully brave person prevents the arousal
(or perhaps continuation) of fear, while yet neither suppressing the
knowledge or ongoing awareness that is needed
Husserl's "Hermeneutical Phenomenology"
(I-G) Sebastian Luft, Marquette University This paper presents a "hermeneutical"
reading of Husserl's transcendental phenomenology. Disregarding his
otherwise "epistemological" concerns in attempting to find
an ultimate foundation, one can also find another strain in Husserl's
late thought that makes his reflections akin to philosophical hermeneutics.
These reflections center on the concepts of "understanding,"
"prejudices," and "tradition." What makes this
approach especially interesting is that Husserl connects it to the
question of founding an "unprejudiced" foundation through
the Epoché. In this light, the idea of "bracketing"
the presuppositions of the natural attitude takes on a new meaning.
It is not about putting previous prejudices out of action for the
sake of establishing an "absolute" foundation. Instead,
a hermeneutical reading sees these prejudices as prejudices and clarifies
how they came about from previous subjective activities within the
life-world. This idea of genetically reconstructing prejudices from
previous activities suggests an interesting alternative to other forms
of philosophical hermeneutics.
Kant's Theory of Synthesis and the Problem
of Universals (III-H) Mary C. MacLeod, Indiana University of Pennsylvania I argue that Kant is reasonably read as endorsing
a subtle variant of Conceptualism. Even a cursory examination of Kant's
theoretical philosophy discovers the thesis that all of nature is
mind-dependent, in some sense; after all, he calls his philosophy
Transcendental Idealism. Attempting to solve the Problem of Universals,
the Standard Conceptualist maintains that generality is to be found
only in minds-not in an extra-mentally real order, but only in a conceptual
one. Standard Conceptualism faces a familiar objection, but I argue
that insofar as Kant's idealism is transcendental his Conceptualism
is superior and avoids this objection. It takes work to express the
familiar objection in a fashion commensurate with Kant's framework.
The objection is still serious, and it is instructive to discover
its Kantian projection, but in its new Kantian guise the objection
can no longer be posed intelligibly.
The Ontology and Scope of Human Rights-Forward
with Ockham (VI-F) A.S. McGrade, University of Connecticut In this paper I argue that Ockham (1285_1347),
sometimes regarded as the chief source for an idea of rights as arbitrary
powers of radically isolated individuals, in fact provides a quintessentially
"reasonable" conception of natural or human rights which
suggests a promising answer to the question of what such rights are,
namely, capacities for reasonable activity. "Forward with Ockham!"
will not solve all of our problems with rights, but attention to his
ideas could help with some of them.
A Wave in the Stream of Chaos: Life Beyond
the Body in Heidegger's Nietzsche (I-G) William McNeill, Depaul University This paper attempts to trace Heidegger's reading
of the human body in Nietzsche, as presented in two key sections of
Heidegger's 1939 lecture course "The Will to Power as Knowledge."
These sections present the body in terms of a "bodying forth"
(Leiben) that emerges from chaos and is continually permeated by chaos,
the latter comprising the fundamental character of the world, according
to Nietzsche. Suspended in the stream of chaos as in the great stream
of becoming, the bodying forth of the body attains a steadfastness
and stability only in the ongoing schematization of perspectival horizons:
a process of schematization that constitutes the fundamental operation
of what we call "knowledge." Yet such knowledge, as in each
case a fixation of becoming, is surpassed by art, which, conceived
metaphysically as a transfiguration of apparently stable, already
schematized beings, raises beings into new possibilities and is thus
more in harmony with becoming.
Emotional Intentionality: Living Meaning in
Emotional Experiences (V-G) Jen McWeeny, John Carroll University In this paper, I argue that the mechanism
of emotional intentionality follows Merleau-Ponty's theory of operative
intentionality as described in his Phenomenology of Perception. First,
operative intentionality, like emotional intentionality, is necessarily
tied to the perspective of an embodied subject. Second, although operative
intentionality is tied to a particular perspective, it is constituted
by one's practical engagements with a world that is beyond one's total
control. Thus, like emotional intentionality, operative intentionality
maintains the ontological tension inherent in Brentano's intentionality
thesis, namely that the intentional object is experienced as both
mind-dependent and mind-independent at the same time. Third, operative
intentionality, like emotional intentionality, admits of meaning that
is non-propositional and not always present to conscious awareness.
Lastly, thinking of emotional intentionality in terms of operative
intentionality can explain two phenomenological features that sometimes
characterize emotional experiences, namely their urgency and their
foreign character.
Berkeley's Mental Architecture: A Coherent
Account of Intentionality (II-F) Genevieve Migely, Claremont Graduate University
Berkeley's theory of intentionality has raised
much controversy over whether or not his account is structurally and
ontologically sound. Some, like David and Alan Hausman, argue that
he has no theory of intention since Berkelian ideas are not intentional.
Others, like Robert Muehlmann, argue that he may indeed have a theory
of intention but it is logically incoherent. Still others, like Charles
McCracken, argue that his theory of intention makes his mental ontology
implausible. In order to provide a coherent account of intentionality,
I will offer a linguistic interpretation of Berkeley's mental architecture
consistent with his ontology. Berkeley presents an innovative spiritual
structure in which the soul is simple in form yet complex in function.
It is this psychic complexity that belies the true nature of Berkeley's
intentionality.
Knowing a Name (IV-H) Geoffrey Pynn, Yale University Millianism about proper names is often associated
with the claim that being a competent user of a name does not require
possessing any descriptive knowledge about the name's bearer. In this
paper, I offer a reductio of the latter view and an explanation of
where it goes wrong. However, this does not mean that Millianism is
false. On the contrary, the bad view about competence turns on a premise
that is independently threatening to Millianism. By rejecting it,
Millians can work to develop a plausible account of competence without
tinkering with the semantics of proper names.
A Decisive Refutation of Epistemicism (V-F)
Greg Ray and Ivana Simic, University of Florida We offer a decisive refutation of reliabilist-externalist
epistemicism-the view of vagueness held by Timothy Williamson-which
is founded on three tenets: 1) reliability of belief is a necessary
condition on knowledge, 2) social externalism is true, and 3) vague
predicates have precise, non-trivial borderlines. From these, a margin
for error doctrine follows: "Where knowledge is inexact, a margin
for error principle applies." This in turn yields the characteristic
thesis of epistemicism, namely that the apparent lack of borderlines
for vague terms is unavoidable ignorance of real borderlines. We give
proof positive that the margin for error doctrine, and hence reliabilist-externalist
epistemicism, is false. Naturally, it also follows that one of the
three tenets is false. Finally, the fact that the epistemic view has
the particular weakness which our proof exploits can be seen to rob
Williamson's (1994) argument for the borderline thesis, (3), of much
of its apparent force.
Some Experienced Qualities Belong to the Experience
(III-F) Paul Raymont, Trent University I argue against a representationalist view
of conscious states, a view that has been promoted by Fred Dretske,
Gilbert Harman, and Michael Tye. According to this view, an experience
does not itself possess the qualities of which it makes me conscious.
The experience makes me conscious of these qualities by representing
them, not by instantiating them. Against this, I argue that
Common Sense, Proper Sensibles, and the Senses
(VI-G) Peter Ross, California State University_Pomona In "Making Sense of the Senses: Individuating
Modalities in Humans and Other Animals," Brian L. Keeley sharply
separates two general strategies for distinguishing sensory modalities
in human beings and other creatures: a commonsense strategy which
relies on qualitative properties of either physical objects or sensory
experiences, and an eliminativist strategy which rejects this reliance
on qualitative properties and instead distinguishes modalities in
purely nonqualitative terms. Taking the eliminativist side, Keeley
claims that neither qualitative properties of physical objects nor
qualia are necessary for distinguishing modalities.
Knowing the Answer (III-I) Jonathan Schaffer, University of Massachusetts_Amherst How should one understand knowledge-wh ascriptions?
That is, how should one understand claims such as "I know where
the car is parked," in which the complement clause is an indirect
question? The received view is that to know-wh is to know that p.
I will argue that the received view is false, and suggest that knowledge-wh
includes irreducible reference to the question Q-to know-wh is to
know that p, as the answer to Q. Knowledge-wh is question-relative.
To know is to know the answer.
Knowledge and Certainty: A Speech-Act Contextualist
Account (III-I) Elka Shortsleeve, University of Florida Contextualists of David Lewis's stripe endorse
that "know" and its cognates are context dependent so as
to heed their infallibilist intuitions while avoiding skepticism.
I argue that the plausibility of infallibilism can be explained away
as arising from two other facts, i.e.:
Does Political Liberalism Rest on a Mistake?
(I-I) Robert Talisse, Vanderbilt University Rawls's political liberalism rests on a founding
premise according to which comprehensive liberalism is incompatible
with a due recognition of the fact of reasonable pluralism. In this
paper, the author argues that social epistemology provides a comprehensive
justification for liberal politics. Consequently, social epistemic
liberalism is a counterexample to the founding premise of political
liberalism, and political liberalism rests on a mistake.
The Gap in Kant's Derivation of the Categorical
Imperative (III-G) Crystal Thorpe, University of Florida We are all familiar with the charge that the
categorical imperative is empty in the sense that it cannot generate
any particular duties or rule out any maxims as impermissible. Less
familiar is the charge that Kant's derivation of the categorical imperative
contains a logical gap. Although less familiar, this charge has the
same devastating upshot: Kant fails to establish a moral principle
that can generate duties and rule out maxims as impermissible. In
this paper, I argue against the standard view, which says that the
gap involves an illicit move between a weak requirement of rationality
and FUL. On my view, the gap involves an illicit move between two
substantive rational requirements-the generalization principle and
its close relative, FUL. My view is more plausible than the standard
view in that it attributes a far less egregious error to Kant.
Kant's Moral Idealism: What's Wrong with Constructivist
Readings of Kant's Ethics? (III-G) Lucas Thorpe, Bilkent University_Turkey Kantian ethics today is dominated by moral
constructivists who define the good in terms of the reasonable. Such
readings give priority to the first formulation of the categorical
imperative and argue that the other two formulations are (ontologically
or definitionally) dependent upon this formulation. I argue, in contrast,
that Kant should be understood as a moral idealist, for although he
is clearly not a utilitarian he does believes that the good is prior
to the right or the reasonable, for to be virtuous is to strive to
instantiate a moral ideal (an ideal that Kant often calls the idea
of a holy being). I argue that constructivist readings mistake a methodological
or epistemic priority for an ontological or definitional priority
and that they do not adequately pay attention to Kant's important
distinction between holiness and virtue.
Some Problems for Contextualism (III-I) Christopher Tillman, University of Rochester This paper argues that epistemic contextualism
is false. First, I briefly present Kaplan's (1989) account of indexical
expressions and use this to give a precise characterization of contextualism.
I then argue that either "knows" is an indexical expression
or that sentences that contain "knows" also contain an indexical
element. I then present a recently popular objection to contextualism
based on the behavior of sentences that contain "knows"
within the scope of attitude verbs. A forthcoming reply by Peter Ludlow
is considered and rejected, and a more sophisticated version of contextualism
based on double-indexing of context is formulated. A reply is offered
on behalf of this view that should be successful iff a popular view
about propositions, eternalism, escapes a parallel objection. I conclude
that this response, though initially promising, is ultimately unsuccessful.
I then turn to considering whether contextualism can provide a fully
general diagnosis of the skeptical paradox. I employ Kaplan's "dthat"
device to argue that they cannot. Finally, I consider a currently
popular general reply to semantic objections to contextualism. According
to this reply, objections that appeal to speakers' intuitions about
the content of "knows" fail since speakers lack the requisite
semantic self-knowledge to determine what is meant by their utterance
of a knowledge ascription. I conclude by arguing that this move is
in serious conflict with a plausible principle concerning the way
in which an expression acquires its linguistic meaning. I conclude
that epistemic contextualism is false.
Sophrosune from Top to Bottom (V-H) Roslyn Weiss, Lehigh University In Book 4 of Plato's Republic, Socrates locates
sophrosune not in the producer class of the polis and the appetitive
part of the soul, but disperses it throughout the polis and soul.
In light of the fact that this odd and unexpected move threatens the
uniqueness of justice and, moreover, virtually assimilates justice
to moderation, the question arises why Socrates defines sophrosune
in this way. I suggest that Socrates wishes to make clear that not
only do the lower parts of the city and soul dislike being ruled,
but philosophers and reason dislike ruling. Since all parts of the
city and soul are asked to do what they don't want to do, all must
restrain themselves, curbing their desire to do what they would prefer
to do. In other words, what they all must exhibit is sophrosune.
Spinoza's Theory of Motivation (V-E) Andrew Youpa, Southern Illinois University In the Scholium to 3p9 of the Ethics, Spinoza
states, "From all this, then, it is clear that we neither strive
for, nor will, neither want, nor desire anything because we judge
it to be good; on the contrary, we judge something to be good because
we strive for it, will it, want it, and desire it." This passage
might seem to be evidence that, for Spinoza, value judgments are motivationally
inert. However, in this paper I try to show that, contrary to what
he might appear to say in 3p9s, Spinoza holds that in some cases a
motivational state results from a value judgment. On my reading, Spinoza's
How to Start and Stop: A Discussion of Walter
Burley's Solution to the Problem of Transition (VI-F) Yiwei Zheng, St. Cloud State University Suppose I will die at a certain moment T.
Before T I am alive. After T I am dead. But at the very instance of
T, am I alive or dead? In this paper I discuss and develop an interpretation
of Walter Burley's solution to the problem of transition: whether
an object is in the new state or in the old state at the moment of
transition. |