Experiencing the facts (critical notice of mcdowell)
Canadian Journal of Philosophy 26:613-36 (1996)
| Abstract | Paul Pietroski, McGill University The general topic of_ Mind and World_, the written version of John McDowell's 1991 John Locke Lectures, is how `concepts mediate the relation between minds and the world'. And one of the main aims is `to suggest that Kant should still have a central place in our discussion of the way thought bears on reality' (1).1 In particular, McDowell urges us to adopt a thesis that he finds in Kant, or perhaps in Strawson's Kant: the content of experience is conceptualized; _what_ we experience is always the kind of thing that we could also believe. When an agent has a veridical experience, she `takes in, for instance sees, _that things are thus and so_' (9). McDowell's argument for this thesis is indirect, but potentially powerful. He discusses a tension concerning the roles of experience and conceptual capacities in thought, and he claims that the only adequate resolution involves granting that experiences have conceptualized content. The tension, elaborated below, can be expressed roughly as follows: judgments must be somehow constrained by features of the external environment, else judgments would be utterly divorced from the world they purport to be about; yet our judgments must be somehow free of external control, else we could give no sense to the idea that we are responsible for our judgments | |||||||||
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Huw Price & John McDowell (1997). Mind and World. Philosophical Books 38 (3):169-181.
Avner Baz (2003). On When Words Are Called For: Cavell, McDowell, and the Wording of the World. Inquiry 46 (4):473 – 500.
David Bain (2009). McDowell and the Presentation of Pains. Philosophical Topics 37 (1):1-24.
Steven Hendley (2010). Answerable to the World: Experience and Practical Intentionality in Brandom's and McDowell's "Intramural" Debate. Theoria 76 (2):129-151.
Alan Thomas (1997). Kant, McDowell and the Theory of Consciousness. European Journal of Philosophy 5 (3):283-305.
John MacFarlane (2008). McDowell's Kantianism. Theoria 70 (2-3):250-265.
Cheryl K. Chen (2006). Empirical Content and Rational Constraint. Inquiry 49 (3):242 – 264.
Paul M. Pietroski (1996). Experiencing the Facts: Critical Notice of Mind and World, by John McDowell. Canadian Journal of Philosophy 26:613-36.
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