Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Notes on Contributors
- Transcending the Emergence/Reduction Distinction: The Case of Biology
- Other Histories, Other Biologies
- The Ontogenesis of Human Identity
- Souls, Minds, Bodies and Planets
- Evo-devo: A New Evolutionary Paradigm
- Is Drift a Serious Alternative to Natural Selection as an Explanation of Complex Adaptive Traits?
- Evolution and Aesthetics
- The Problems of Biological Design
- Are there Genes?
- Folk Psychology and the Biological Basis of Intersubjectivity
- The Loss of Rational Design
- Under Darwin's Cosh? Neo-Aristotelian Thinking in Environmental Ethics
- The Cultural Origins of Cognitive Adaptations
- Name Index
Folk Psychology and the Biological Basis of Intersubjectivity
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Notes on Contributors
- Transcending the Emergence/Reduction Distinction: The Case of Biology
- Other Histories, Other Biologies
- The Ontogenesis of Human Identity
- Souls, Minds, Bodies and Planets
- Evo-devo: A New Evolutionary Paradigm
- Is Drift a Serious Alternative to Natural Selection as an Explanation of Complex Adaptive Traits?
- Evolution and Aesthetics
- The Problems of Biological Design
- Are there Genes?
- Folk Psychology and the Biological Basis of Intersubjectivity
- The Loss of Rational Design
- Under Darwin's Cosh? Neo-Aristotelian Thinking in Environmental Ethics
- The Cultural Origins of Cognitive Adaptations
- Name Index
Summary
The Usual Story
Recent philosophical discussions of lntersubjectivity generally start by stating or assuming that our ability to understand and interact with others is enabled by a ‘folk psychology’ or ‘theory of mind’. Folk psychology is characterized as the ability to attribute intentional states, such as beliefs and desires, to others, in order to predict and explain their behaviour. Many authors claim that this ability is not merely one amongst many constituents of interpersonal understanding but an underlying core that enables social life. For example, Churchland states that folk psychology ‘embodies our baseline understanding’ of others (1996, p. 3). Currie and Sterelny similarly assert that ‘our basic grip on the social world depends on our being able to see our fellows as motivated by beliefs and desires we sometimes share and sometimes do not’ (2000, p. 143). And, as Frith and Happe put it, ‘this ability appears to be a prerequisite for normal social interaction: in everyday life we make sense of each other's behaviour by appeal to a belief-desire psychology’ (1999, p. 2).
As there is general consensus concerning what folk psychology is, the focus of recent debates has been on how it is accomplished. ‘Theory-theorists’ claim that the term ‘theory of mind’ should be taken literally. Attribution of intentional states is enabled by a largely tacit, systematically organized body of knowledge concerning intentional states and their relations. ‘Simulation-theorists’, in contrast, maintain that our understanding of others depends upon a practical ability as opposed to an organized body of knowledge.
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- Philosophy, Biology and Life , pp. 211 - 234Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005
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