Behaviorism

Many philosophers have concerned themselves with the philosophy of the mind, which largely attempts to describe the relationship between the mind and the body, if there is one at all. The word ‘mind’ in this case refers to all of our hopes, dreams, beliefs, feelings, thoughts, and similar abstractions. The ‘body’ is more loosely defined – often referring to the brain, nervous system, and/or various sensory inputs located around the body: the eyes, nose, mouth, ears, possibly even including the entire epidermis for touch....

September 15, 2010

Hume on the Nature of Causation

According to Hume, there are problems present in moral philosophy that stand to bring it to an intellectual level below that of the mathematical sciences. Largely analytical works such as those based on mathematics are founded on the relations between our ideas, and are generally extremely precise in their statements and proofs. These are intuitively true in a sense that do not require any external information, as their legitimacy is not dependant on anything found in nature, and in fact their falsehood is generally thought to be logically inconceivable....

September 8, 2010

Snowdon & Burge on Perception

L-states are a necessary component of the causal theory of perception, which generally states that a subject’s perception is of an object only if some notion of causation by the object can be satisfied. Accordingly, the L-state is the effect an object must have on the subject which perceives it, which is that of a visual state that may be described with a sentence in the form of, “It looks to the subject that…” This is to say that the subject sees an object only if it looks to the subject as though it is looking at the object....

September 3, 2010

Kant and the Morality of Action

It seems very common for a person, especially around before Kant’s time, to presume that their own principles of morality also happen to apply to all other people. This is based on the idea that moral principles are come upon through the use of reason, which all rational beings are intrinsically capable of, and therefore transcend all differences of culture or individuality. In his Groundwork for the Metaphysics of Morals, Kant attempts to develop a matured view of morality that accounts for the obvious differences in moral belief that we observe in one another every day....

May 11, 2010

The Uncanny Hero Ulysses

Though their stories are set over three thousand years apart, taking place around 1200BC after the siege of Troy and around 1930AD during the Great Depression respectively, there are a shocking number of similarities between the stories the Odyssey, and the film Oh Brother Where Art Thou. If these similarities seem too coincidental, the film even begins with an old-timey slide of a direct quote from Homer’s epic poem, simultaneously establishing such a direct connection and also alluding towards its modern take on the slapstick silent-film style....

March 27, 2010