Externalism and the Mental

Price: 725.00 

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ISBN:

9780199453603

Publication date:

23/02/2015

Hardback

218 pages

216x140mm

Price: 725.00 

We sell our titles through other companies
Disclaimer :You will be redirected to a third party website.The sole responsibility of supplies, condition of the product, availability of stock, date of delivery, mode of payment will be as promised by the said third party only. Prices and specifications may vary from the OUP India site.

ISBN:

9780199453603

Publication date:

23/02/2015

Hardback

218 pages

Madhucchanda Sen

The book analyses the mindworld relation with a focus on a particular debate in philosophy of mind which has gained attention in recent times—the externalism and internalism debate. It explores the history of development of externalistic views which have taught us that we should go beyond these traditional ways of viewing the mindworld relation. 

Rights:  World Rights

Madhucchanda Sen

Description

A key concern of philosophy is the mind’s relation with the world. The debate between externalism and internalism is not a new one and a great number of thinkers have contributed to it in the recent past. Externalism and the Mental explores the inherent contradictions in the traditional line of thought that has shaped this debate so far. The book analyses how an understanding built on compartmentalized categories has stifled the process of philosophical thinking. Despite stating at the outset her inclination towards externalism, the author does not merely take sides in an age-old debate, but rather approaches it from a fresh perspective. By challenging our understanding of what is meant by the external and the internal and by showing how the distinction between them may occasionally blur, the book questions the very existence of the divide that has sustained the debate under discussion.  Pointing towards the necessity of a paradigm shift in the way the mind–world relation has been perceived, this work explores the possibility of a dialogue emerging between analytic philosophy, phenomenology, and Navya-Nyaya—an engagement that would cut across the divide between Eastern and Western philosophical traditions. 

Madhucchanda Sen

Table of contents

Preface 
1. Externalism and Content 
2. What the Internal Could Be
3. The Constitutive Relation 
4. Externalism and the Inner-Outer Distinction 
Index 

About the Author  

Madhucchanda Sen

Features

  • State-of-the-art debate in contemporary philosophy of Mind and Language
  • Questions the basis of previous investigations and reformulates to provide a unique solution
  • Takes into account mind, language and body (external world) to give a comprehensive statement

Madhucchanda Sen

Madhucchanda Sen

Description

A key concern of philosophy is the mind’s relation with the world. The debate between externalism and internalism is not a new one and a great number of thinkers have contributed to it in the recent past. Externalism and the Mental explores the inherent contradictions in the traditional line of thought that has shaped this debate so far. The book analyses how an understanding built on compartmentalized categories has stifled the process of philosophical thinking. Despite stating at the outset her inclination towards externalism, the author does not merely take sides in an age-old debate, but rather approaches it from a fresh perspective. By challenging our understanding of what is meant by the external and the internal and by showing how the distinction between them may occasionally blur, the book questions the very existence of the divide that has sustained the debate under discussion.  Pointing towards the necessity of a paradigm shift in the way the mind–world relation has been perceived, this work explores the possibility of a dialogue emerging between analytic philosophy, phenomenology, and Navya-Nyaya—an engagement that would cut across the divide between Eastern and Western philosophical traditions. 

Table of contents

Preface 
1. Externalism and Content 
2. What the Internal Could Be
3. The Constitutive Relation 
4. Externalism and the Inner-Outer Distinction 
Index 

About the Author