The relationship between experience and thought is one of the distinctive problems in contemporary philosophy and has significant implications for both philosophy of mind and epistemology. John McDowell in his Magnum Opus Mind and World has argued in favour of a rational and conceptual relationship between experience and thought. In our understanding of the relationship between experience and thought, in his opinion, we fall into an “intolerable oscillation” between Myth of the Given and Coherentism. One of these pitfalls, he specifically targets, is Davidson’s coherentism according to which there cannot be rational relationship between experience and thought. The point Davidson makes is that our perception of the world cannot give justifi...
This paper is an examination and evaluation of McDowell’s criticisms of Davidson’s views on conceptu...
Dualists believe that experiences have neither location nor extension, while reductive and ‘non-redu...
According to Donald Davidson, in order to have any concept or belief whatsoever, a creature must \u2...
The relationship between experience and thought is one of the distinctive problems in contemporary p...
In “A Coherence Theory of Truth and Knowledge” Donald Davidson proposes a coherence picture of knowl...
In Mind and World (1994/1996), John McDowell follows Donald Davidson in claiming that the world is a...
This paper discusses two dogmas attributed to Davidson's coherentism. The first dogma says that expe...
Copyright © 2013 Chung-I. Lin. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons...
Mind and World is written in a Wittgensteinian spirit. It is a work whose aim is to address a specif...
John McDowell’s work (in Mind and Worldand elsewhere) has largely been devoted to two main objective...
In Mind and World and succeeding works, John McDowell elucidates a conception of perceptual experien...
What is the relation between our beliefs or thoughts in general and the perceptual experience of the...
In Mind and World John McDowell proposes to exorcise ‘some characteristic anxieties of modern philos...
Philosophers debate whether all, some or none of the represcntational content of our sensory experie...
Since the beginning of modern philosophy, philosophers have struggled to establish that both the ext...
This paper is an examination and evaluation of McDowell’s criticisms of Davidson’s views on conceptu...
Dualists believe that experiences have neither location nor extension, while reductive and ‘non-redu...
According to Donald Davidson, in order to have any concept or belief whatsoever, a creature must \u2...
The relationship between experience and thought is one of the distinctive problems in contemporary p...
In “A Coherence Theory of Truth and Knowledge” Donald Davidson proposes a coherence picture of knowl...
In Mind and World (1994/1996), John McDowell follows Donald Davidson in claiming that the world is a...
This paper discusses two dogmas attributed to Davidson's coherentism. The first dogma says that expe...
Copyright © 2013 Chung-I. Lin. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons...
Mind and World is written in a Wittgensteinian spirit. It is a work whose aim is to address a specif...
John McDowell’s work (in Mind and Worldand elsewhere) has largely been devoted to two main objective...
In Mind and World and succeeding works, John McDowell elucidates a conception of perceptual experien...
What is the relation between our beliefs or thoughts in general and the perceptual experience of the...
In Mind and World John McDowell proposes to exorcise ‘some characteristic anxieties of modern philos...
Philosophers debate whether all, some or none of the represcntational content of our sensory experie...
Since the beginning of modern philosophy, philosophers have struggled to establish that both the ext...
This paper is an examination and evaluation of McDowell’s criticisms of Davidson’s views on conceptu...
Dualists believe that experiences have neither location nor extension, while reductive and ‘non-redu...
According to Donald Davidson, in order to have any concept or belief whatsoever, a creature must \u2...