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PHIL233 Philosophy of Mind and Language

The foundation and development of modern philosophy of mind and language in the second half of the twentieth century, and the radical effects these developments have had on modern analytic philosophy.

This paper is in two halves. The Mind half looks at: marks of the mental, physicalism and its rivals, perception, thought, intentionality, externalism and the extended mind, consciousness, mental causation, other minds, self-knowledge, and the self. The Language half of the paper looks at a number of themes concerning linguistic meaning and mental content, including classic works by W.V.O. Quine, H.P. Grice, and Saul Kripke.

Paper title Philosophy of Mind and Language
Paper code PHIL233
Subject Philosophy
EFTS 0.15
Points 18 points
Teaching period Semester 1 (On campus)
Domestic Tuition Fees (NZD) $955.05
International Tuition Fees Tuition Fees for international students are elsewhere on this website.

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Prerequisite
One PHIL paper or 72 points
Restriction
PHIL 224, PHIL 302, PHIL 306, PHIL 324 and PHIL 333
Schedule C
Arts and Music
Contact

philosophy@otago.ac.nz

Teaching staff

Professor Alex Miller and Associate Professor Andrew Moore

Paper Structure

The first half of the paper addresses central issues in contemporary philosophy of mind, including:

    • physicalism and its rivals
    • perception and thought
    • intentionality and consciousness
    • mental causation
    • other minds
    • self-knowledge and the self

    The second half of the paper looks at a number of themes concerning linguistic meaning and mental content, including:

    • W.V.O. Quine's famous arguments concerning the indeterminacy of translation
    • H. P. Grice's attempt to account for the notion of linguistic meaning via the notion of speakers' communicative intentions
    • Saul Kripke's exploration (in his Naming and Necessity) of connections between the philosophy of language and mind and issues in metaphysics concerning necessity and contingency
    Teaching Arrangements

    Two classes per week; a two hour lecture and a one hour lecture.

    The classes mix more formal lecture components with less formal seminar components.

    Textbooks

    Tim Bayne, Philosophy of Mind: An Introduction(Routledge 2021)
    https://www.routledge.com/Philosophy-of-Mind-An-Introduction/Bayne

    Alexander Miller, Philosophy of Language (3rd edition 2018).

    Graduate Attributes Emphasised
    Scholarship, Communication, Critical thinking, Ethics, Research, Self-motivation.
    View more information about Otago's graduate attributes.
    Learning Outcomes

    The goals for the first half of the paper are:

    • Understanding, and skilled appraisal, of the main physicalist accounts of the mind, shown in a research essay or exam answer
    • Understanding of, and skilled response to, key issues concerning consciousness or intentionality, shown in a research essay or exam answer
    • Understanding of, and skilled response to, key issues concerning perception, thought, mental causation, other minds, self-knowledge, or the self, shown in a research essay or exam answer

    The goals for the second half the paper are:

    • Understanding of, and skilled response to, Quine's argument from below for indeterminacy of translation, to be determined in a research essay
    • Understanding of, and skilled response to, other topics (including Quine's argument from above, Grice's account of meaning and alternatives, Kripke on Naming and Necessity), to be shown in exam answers
    • Engagement with PHIL 233/333, demonstrated in written work through engagement with lecture handouts

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    Timetable

    Semester 1

    Location
    Dunedin
    Teaching method
    This paper is taught On Campus
    Learning management system
    Blackboard

    Lecture

    Stream Days Times Weeks
    Attend
    A1 Wednesday 14:00-15:50 9-14, 16-22
    Friday 09:00-09:50 9-13, 16-22