Groups as fictional agents [0.03%]
团体的虚构代理属性
Lars J K Moen
Lars J K Moen
Can groups really be agents or is group agency just a fiction? Christian List and Philip Pettit argue influentially for group-agent realism by showing how certain groups form and act on attitudes in ways they take to be unexplainable at the...
Michael Klenk
Michael Klenk
Moral disagreement is often thought to be of great metaethical significance for moral realists. I explore what remains of that significance when we look at moral disagreement through the lens of a combination of two influential and independ...
Mona Simion
Mona Simion
Alessandra Taniesini's 'The Mismeasure of the Self' develops an internalist account of epistemic vice. On this view, epistemic vices are grounded in attitudes towards the self: fatalism, self-satisfaction, narcissistic infatuation, and self...
Natalie Alana Ashton
Natalie Alana Ashton
I evaluate Tanesini's attempt to provide a social approach to intellectual vices. I do this in three steps. First, I explain what I mean by a 'social approach'. Tanesini offers three senses in which her account is social, and I explain each...
Dirk Kindermann
Dirk Kindermann
The received picture of linguistic communication understands communication as the transmission of information from speaker's head to hearer's head. This picture is in conflict with the attractive Lewisian view of belief as self-location, wh...
Wanting and Liking: Observations from the Neuroscience and Psychology Laboratory [0.03%]
求而不得:来自神经科学和心理学实验室的观察
Kent C Berridge
Kent C Berridge
Different brain mechanisms seem to mediate wanting and liking for the same reward. This may have implications for the modular nature of mental processes, and for understanding addictions, compulsions, free will and other aspects of desire. ...
Michael Hauskeller
Michael Hauskeller
Genetic engineering is often looked upon with disfavour on the grounds that it involves 'tampering with nature'. Most philosophers do not take this notion seriously. However, some do. Those who do tend to understand nature in an Aristotelia...