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  • Representation and Mind series
  • psychology
  • Representations, Targets, and Attitudes
Representations, Targets, and Attitudes

Representation and Mind series

Representations, Targets, and Attitudes

by Robert Cummins

  • $34.00 Hardcover

163 pp., 6 x 9 in,

  • Hardcover
  • 9780262032353
  • Published: January 23, 1996
  • Publisher: The MIT Press

$34.00

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  • Description
  • Author(s)
  • Praise

What is it for something in the mind to represent something? Distinguished philosopher of mind Robert Cummins looks at the familiar problems of representation theory (what information is represented in the mind, what form mental representation takes, how representational schemes are implemented in the brain, what it is for one thing to represent another) from an unprecedented angle. Instead of following the usual procedure of defending a version of "indicator" semantics, Cummins begins with a theory of representational error and uses this theory to constrain the account of representational content. Thus, the problem of misrepresentation, which plagues all other accounts, is avoided at the start. Cummins shows that representational error can be accommodated only if the content of a representation is intrinsic—independent of its use and causal role in the system that employs it.

Cummins's theory of error is based on the teleological idea of a "target," an intentional concept but one that differs importantly from that of an ordinary intentional object. Using this notion he offers a schematic theory of representation and an account of propositional attitudes that takes exception with some popular positions, such as conceptual role semantics, Fodor's representational theory of the mind, and Putnam's twin-earth examples.

Bradford Books imprint

Robert Cummins is Professor of Philosophy at University of Illinois-Urbana/Champaign.

This is an important new Cummins work.... To read Cummins' material is to be forced to look at the familiar problems of intentionality from an unprecedented angle, and to re-evaluate one's own views in light of his new objections to the Representational theory in particular. This book cannot fail to deepen understanding, even if one rejects Cummins' own contentions and even if one's own opinions all survive the exercise.

William J. Lycan, University of North Carolina

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