Sharing thoughts : philosophical perspectives on intersubjectivity and communication /
Are there really thoughts all of us share and think? Or is intersubjective thought more a matter of thinking thoughts that are suitably related or coordinated with one another? The original and rich essays in 'Sharing Thoughts' delve into these often overlooked questions to shed light on t...
| Other Authors: | , , |
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| Format: | eBook |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
Oxford ; New York, NY :
Oxford University Press,
[2025]
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| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | Connect to the full text of this electronic book |
Table of Contents:
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- 1 Sharing Thoughts and Intersubjectivity
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The Two Fs: Frege and Fine
- 3. Intersubjectivity and Coordination
- 4. Intersubjectivity and Subjectivity
- 5. Intersubjectivity and Communication
- 6. Intersubjectivity Beyond Belief
- 7. The Chapters
- PART I: SAMENESS OF THOUGHT AND BEYOND
- PART 2: COORDINATION AND THINKING THE SAME-ISH
- Acknowledgments
- 2 Communication in Music
- 1. The Issues
- 2. A Basic Explanatory Resource: Jacksonian Modes of Presentation
- 3. What Is Heard in the Music: Elaboration and Extension
- 4. Reactive Content
- 3 Shared Egocentric Thoughts
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Relational Views of Thought Individuation
- 3. Shared Thoughts and Indexicals
- 4. The Thought-Action Principle
- 5. Problem 1: Thoughts Expressed Using Different Indexicals
- 6. Egocentricity
- 7. Shared Egocentric Thoughts?
- 8. Problem 2: The Significance of Egocentricity for Action
- 9. A Modified Thought-Action Principle
- 10. Conclusion
- 4 Frames, Senses, and Thought-Equivalence*
- 1. Thought Identity and De Facto Equivalence
- 2. Non-Doxastic Attitudes and De Facto Equivalence
- 3. Ultra-Intensionality and Quasi-Cyclicality
- Example 1: Agamemnon at Aulis
- Example 2: Macbeth at Inverness
- 4. Can Quasi-Cyclical Preferences Be Rational?
- 5. Back to Thought-Identity and Thought-Equivalence
- 5 Concepts as Shared Regulative Ideals
- 1. Keeping Track of a Topic
- 2. Representational Traditions
- 3. Interpretation and Disambiguation
- 4. Concepts as Regulative Ideals
- 5. Transparency
- 7. Thinking Together
- 8 An Externalist Shared Thought View of Communication, Agreement, and Disagreement
- 1. Introduction
- 2. An Externalist Shared Thought View
- 3. The Cases
- Example 1: Shared Content and Merely Apparent Communication
- Example 2: Shared Content and Merely Apparent Agreement
- Example 3: Shared Content and Merely Apparent Disagreement
- 4. An Internalist Non-Shared Thought View
- 5. Pollock's Three Claims
- 6. An Externalist Response
- 7. Conclusion
- 9 Sameness of Mode of Presentation
- 1. The Criterion of Difference