I / Introduction --; 1. The Revival of Mental Philosophy --; 2. Mechanism --; 3. Naturalism --; 4. Two Problems of Mind --; II / What Is a Rule of Mind? --; 1. Signals and Control --; 2. Turing Machines --; 3. Logic and Logic of Mind --; 4. Nerve Networks and Finite Automata --; 5. Computer Logic --; 6. Glimpses from Psychology --; 7. Summary on Rules --; III / Behavior and Structure --; 1. Some Varieties of Automata --; 2. Fitting and Guiding --; 3. Empirical Realism --; IV / Mechanism --; Arguments PRO and CON --; 1. Thinking Machines --; 2. The Argument from Analogy --; 3. Psychological Explanation and Church's Thesis --; 4. On the Dissimilarity of Behaviors --; 5. Computers, Determinism, and Action --; 6. Summary to the Main Argument from Analogy --; V / Functionalism, Rationalism, and Cognitivism --; 1. Psychological and Automaton States --; 2. Behaviorism --; 3. Neorationalism --; 4. Cognitivism --; VI / The Logic of Acceptance --; 1. Universals, Gestalten, and Taking --; 2. Acceptance --; 3. Expectation --; 4. Family Resemblances --; VII / Perception --; 1. Perceptual Objects --; 2. Perception Perspectives --; VIII / Belief and Desire --; 1. Perceptual Belief --; 2. Desire --; 3. A Model of Desire --; 4. Standing Belief --; Representation --; IX / Reference and Truth --; 1. Pure Semantics versus User Semantics --; 2. Belief Sentences --; 3. Denotation --; 4. A Theory of Truth --; 5. Adequacy --; X / Toward Meaning --; 1. Linguistic Meaning --; 2. Propositions --; 3. Intensions of Names and Predicates --; XI / Psychological Theory and the Mindbrain Problem --; 1. Realism and Reduction --; 2. Explanation --; 3. Free Will --; 4. Mental Occurrents --; Table of Figures, Formulas, and Tables --; Notes.
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
This book presents a mechanist philosophy of mind. I hold that the human mind is a system of computational or recursive rules that are embodied in the nervous system; that the material presence of these rules accounts for perception, conception, speech, belief, desire, intentional acts, and other forms of intelligence. In this edition I have retained the whole of the fIrst edition except for discussion of issues which no longer are relevant in philosophy of mind and cognitive psychology. Earlier reference to disputes of the 1960's and 70's between hard-line empiricists and neorationalists over the psychological status of grammars and language acquisition, for instance, has simply been dropped. In place of such material I have entered some timely or new topics and a few changes. There are brief references to the question of computer versus distributed processing (connectionist) theories. Many of these questions dissolve if one distinguishes as I now do in Chapter II between free and embodied algorithms. I have also added to my comments on artifIcal in telligence some reflections. on Searle's Chinese Translator. The irreducibility of machine functionalist psychology in my version or any other has been exaggerated. Input, output, and state entities are token identical to physical or biological things of some sort, while a machine system as a collection of recursive rules is type identical to representatives of equivalence classes. This nuld technicality emerges in Chapter XI. It entails that so-called "anomalous monism" is right in one sense and wrong in another.