Problems of Mind: Descartes to Wittgenstein |
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Page 80
... Logical Positivism , ed . A. J. Ayer ( Glencoe , Ill . , 1959 ) , p . 165. Carnap has long since given up logical behaviorism ; but this does not diminish the value of his lucid ex- positi of it . or indirectly derives that concept from ...
... Logical Positivism , ed . A. J. Ayer ( Glencoe , Ill . , 1959 ) , p . 165. Carnap has long since given up logical behaviorism ; but this does not diminish the value of his lucid ex- positi of it . or indirectly derives that concept from ...
Page 93
... logical behaviorism quite seriously by imagining a man who is not merely a theoretical behaviorist but , as we might say , an in- stinctive or natural behaviorist . He will , in daily life , regard other people in just the way that logical ...
... logical behaviorism quite seriously by imagining a man who is not merely a theoretical behaviorist but , as we might say , an in- stinctive or natural behaviorist . He will , in daily life , regard other people in just the way that logical ...
Page 100
... Logical behaviorism holds that mental descriptions are equivalent to ( " translatable " into ) purely physi- cal descriptions . This doctrine cannot be correct if the application to human beings of descriptions of the latter sort is ...
... Logical behaviorism holds that mental descriptions are equivalent to ( " translatable " into ) purely physi- cal descriptions . This doctrine cannot be correct if the application to human beings of descriptions of the latter sort is ...
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anger angry assumption B. F. Skinner behaviorist believe bodily location brain events brain processes buzzing sound Carnap conceive concept of pain consciousness contingent correlations Descartes essay example exist expression false form of description Hansen haviorism Hume Ibid imagine inclination infer inner experiences inner ostensive definition inside the skull introspection Investigations J. J. C. Smart J. S. Mill know what pain knowledge Locke Locke's logical behaviorism meaning mental concepts mental descriptions mental events mental occurrences mental phenomena mental predicates mental terms Mill monism movements names nature never felt pain normal Norman Malcolm object observation one's oneself ordinary language perceive perception person Peter Geach Petersen philosophers philosophy of mind picture problem Psychology purely physical descriptions Robinson Scientific Realism sensations and images sense sentences simple ideas Smart solipsism someone speak statements subject of experience suppose thing thinking thought tion true understand utterances verified W. T. Stace word pain