The Life of the Mind: An Essay on Phenomenological Externalism

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Psychology Press, 2003 - Body, Mind & Spirit - 152 pages
The Life of the Mind^ presents an original and striking conception of the mind and its place in nature. In a spirited and rigorous attack on most of the orthodox positions in contemporary philosophy of mind, McCulloch connects three of the orthodoxy's central themes - externalism, phenomenology and the relation between science and commonsense psychology - in a defence of a thoroughly anti-Cartesian conception of mental life. McCulloch argues that the life of the mind will never be understood until we properly understand the subject's essential embodiment and immersion in the world, until we give up the idea that an understanding of the mind must be 'scientific', and until we give up the idea that intentionality and phenomenology must be understood separately. The product of over twenty years' thinking on these issues, McCulloch's book is a bold and significant contribution to philosophy.
 

Contents

the Demonic Dilemma
1
The Epistemological Real Distinction
11
PART II
24
Content Externalism
41
Behaviourembracing Mentalism
49
Scientific Realism the Subjective the Objective
54
7
126
Bibliography
141
1199
149
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About the author (2003)

Gregory McCulloch was Professor of Philosophy at Birmingham University. He is the author of The Game of the Name (1989), Using Sartre (Routledge, 1994) and The Mind and its World (Routledge 1995).

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