Attention is cognitive unison: an essay in philosophical psychology

Attention is cognitive unison: an essay in philosophical psychology

Mole, Christopher

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Some psychological phenomena can be explained by identifying and describing the processes that constitute them. Others cannot be explained in that way. In Attention Is Cognitive Unison Christopher Mole gives a precise account of the metaphysical difference that divides these two categories and shows that, whencurrent psychologists attempt to explain attention, they assign it to the wrong one. INDICE: 1.: Highlights of a Difficult History; 1.1 The Preliminary Identification of Our Topic; 1.2 Three Approaches; 1.3 Bradley's Protest; 1.4 James's Disjunctive Theory; 1.5 The Source of Bradley's Dissatisfaction; 1.6 Behaviourism and After; 1.7 Heirs of Bradley in the Twentieth Century; 2.: The Underlying Metaphysical Issue; 2.1 Explanatory Tactics; 2.2 The Basic Distinction;2.3 Metaphysical Categories and Taxonomies; 2.4 Adverbialism, Multiple Realizability, and Natural Kinds; 2.5 Adverbialism and Levels of Explanation; 2.6 Taxonomies and Supervenience Relations; 3.: Rejecting the Process First View; 3.1 Supervenience-Failure; 3.2 The Modal Commitments of The Process-First View; 3.3 The Interference Argument - A Putative Problem for Adverbialist Accounts; 3.4 Conclusion; 4.: Cognitive Unison; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 The Problem with Attitude Based Adverbialism; 4.3 Gilbert Ryle and Alan White; 4.4 White's Argument Against Disposition-Based Adverbialism; 4.5 The Cognitive Unison Theory; 4.6 Tasks; 4.7 Cognitive Processes; 4.8 Potential Service of a Task; 4.9 Superordinate Tasks; 4.10 Some Features of the Theory; 4.11 Divided Attention; 4.12 Degrees of Attention and Merely Partial Attention; 4.13 Summary; 5.: The Causal Life of Attention; 5.1 Mental Causation; 5.2 How to Respond to Mental Causation Objections; 5.3 The Causal Role of Attention; 5.4 Attention as an enablingcondition; 5.5 Counterfactuals; 5.6 The Causal Relevance of Attention per se;5.7 Counterfactuals and Causally Relevant Properties; 5.8 Objections to Counterfactual Analysis of Causation and of Causal Relevance; 5.9 The Extrinsicnessof Unison; 5.10 The Privative Character of Unison and The Problem of Absence Causation; 5.11 Causal Exclusion; 5.12 Summary; 6.: Consequences for CognitivePsychology; 6.1 Psychology and Metaphysics; 6.2 The Metaphysical Commitments of the Process-Identifying Project; 6.3 The Diverse Explanatory Construals of Current Psychological Results; 6.4 Reasons for Deflation; 6.5 Inductively Unreliable Properties; 6.6 Questions Without Answers; 6.7 The Positive Payoff; 7.:Philosophical Work for The Theory of Attention; 7.1 Putting Attention to Philosophical Work; 7.2 Attention and Reference; 7.3 Attention and Consciousness; 7.4 Prospects for Optimism; Notes; References

  • ISBN: 978-0-19-538452-9
  • Editorial: Oxford University
  • Encuadernacion: Cartoné
  • Páginas: 224
  • Fecha Publicación: 27/01/2011
  • Nº Volúmenes: 1
  • Idioma: Inglés