
Intentionality Is The Mind's Ability To Be Of, About, Or Directed At Things, Or To Say Something. For Example, A Thought Might Say That Grass Is Green Or That Santa Claus Is Jolly, And A Visual Experience Might Be Of A Blue Cup. While The Existence Of The Phenomenon Of Intentionality Is Manifestly Obvious, How Exactly The Mind Gets To Be Directed At Things, Which May Not Even Exist, Is Deeply Mysterious And Controversial. It Has Been Long Assumed That The Best Way To Explain Intentionality Is In Terms Of Tracking Relations, Information, Functional Roles, And Similar Notions. This Book Breaks From This Tradition, Arguing That The Only Empirically Adequate And In Principle Viable Theory Of Intentionality Is One In Terms Of Phenomenal Consciousness, The Felt, Subjective, Or Qualitative Feature Of Mental Life. According To The Theory Advanced By Mendelovici, The Phenomenal Intentionality Theory, There Is A Central Kind Of Intentionality, Phenomenal Intentionality, That Arises From Phenomenal Consciousness Alone, And Any Other Kind Of Intentionality Derives From It. The Phenomenal Intentionality Theory Faces Important Challenges In Accounting For The Rich And Sophisticated Contents Of Thoughts, Broad And Object-involving Contents, And Nonconscious States. Mendelovici Proposes A Novel And Particularly Strong Version Of The Theory That Can Meet These Challenges. The End Result Is A Radically Internalistic Picture Of The Mind, On Which All Phenomenally Represented Contents Are Literally In Our Heads, And Any Non-phenomenal Contents We In Some Sense Represent Are Expressly Singled Out By Us.
Can intentionality be explained solely through the lens of phenomenal consciousness rather than traditional tracking or functionalist accounts? Angela Mendelovici, a philosopher specializing in the philosophy of mind, challenges the prevailing externalist paradigms that define mental directionality through information processing or functional roles. She posits that phenomenal intentionality—the subjective, qualitative aspect of mental life—serves as the foundational source from which all other forms of intentionality are derived. By constructing a robust internalist framework, the author argues that mental content is fundamentally rooted in the conscious experience of the subject.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in the philosophy of mind recognize this work as a significant contribution to the internalist debate, often citing its rigorous defense against common objections to phenomenal intentionality. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which requires a strong background in analytic philosophy to fully grasp the nuances of the arguments presented.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190863811
ISBN-13:
9780190863814
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!