k vanv i g The value of knowledge and the pursuit of understanding w i l l i am rob i n s on Understanding phenomenal consciousness m i c ha e l sm i th Ethics and the a priori d. h i l l Thought and world way ne dav i s Meaning, expression and thought andrew m e l ny k A physicalist manifesto jonathan l. h e l m Emotional reason: deliberation, motivation, and the nature of value ri c hard joyc e The myth of morality i sh t i yaque haj i Deontic morality and control andrew new man The correspondence theory of truth jane h eal Mind, reason, and imagination pete r ra i lton Facts, values and norms c h ri stoph e r s. arm st rong A world of states of affairs dav i d coc k burn Other times mar k lanc e & joh n o ’ leary - hawth orne The grammar of meaning annet te barne s Seeing through self-deception dav i d lew i s Papers in metaphysics and epistemology m i c ha e l b ratman Faces of intention dav i d lew i s Papers in ethics and social philosophy mar k rowland s The body in mind: understanding cognitive processes log i g unnar s s on Making moral sense: beyond Habermas and Gauthier b e nnet t w. lowe Subjects of experience norton ne l k i n Consciousness and the origins of thought p i e rre jacob What minds can do andre gal lo i s The world without, the mind within d. w i l s on Cartesian psychology and physical minds barry maund Colours m i c ha e l dev i t t Coming to our senses sy dney sh oe make r The first-person perspective and other essays m i c ha e l stoc ke r Valuing emotions arda de nke l Object and property e. ri c hard s on Practical reasoning about final ends rob e rt a. ro se nk rantz Substance among other categories paul h e l m Belief policies noah le mo s Intrinsic value ly nne rudde r bake r Explaining attitudes h e nry s. th om s on Massachusetts Institute of Technology re c e nt t i t le s jo sh ua h of f man & gary s. lycan University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill sy dney sh oe make r Cornell University j ud i th j.
lowe and walte r s i nnot t -arm st rong Advisory editors jonathan danc y University of Reading joh n hal dane University of St Andrews g i l b e rt harman Princeton University f rank jac k s on Australian National University w i l l i am g. Boucher (Cambridge, 1998).ĬAMBRIDGE STUDIES IN PHILOSOPHY General editors e. He has published in Analysis and Philosophical Psychology and contributed to Language and Thought: Interdisciplinary Themes, ed. ke i th f rank i sh is Lecturer in Philosophy at the Department of Philosophy, The Open University.
This book will be valuable for philosophers, psychologists, and cognitive scientists. Topics discussed include the function of conscious thought, the cognitive role of natural language, the relation between partial and flat-out belief, the possibility of active belief formation, and the nature of akrasia, self-deception, and first-person authority. Building on this claim, he develops a picture of the human mind as a two-level structure, consisting of a basic mind and a supermind, and shows how the resulting account sheds light on a number of puzzling phenomena and helps to vindicate folk psychology. Keith Frankish argues that the folk-psychological term ‘belief ’ refers to two distinct types of mental state, which have different properties and support different kinds of mental explanation.
Mind and Supermind Mind and Supermind offers a new perspective on the nature of belief and the structure of the human mind.