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Full Description
Philosophical work on the nature of thought has, until recently, focused primarily on what it is for an individual to think, leaving aside important questions about the intersubjective dimension of thought. For example: In what sense, if any, can thoughts really be shared? Is there a shareability requirement on successful communication, disagreement, or the transmission of knowledge? Do particular types of thought such as those based on perception or self-location raise distinctive challenges to their shareability? More generally, how should we understand the communication and coordination of our thoughts in exchanges with others? Are there distinctive rationality constraints governing the intersubjective aspects of thought?
Sharing Thoughts brings together original work by established and emerging philosophers to address these and related foundational issues, while also paying attention to more specific questions such as the interplay between the intersubjectivity of thought and the internalism/externalism debate, the elucidation of first-person or egocentric thought, our capacity for joint thinking, the conditions for knowledge transmission and collective inquiry, the expression of thought in music, and more.
Contents
1: Víctor M. Verdejo and Matheus Valente: Sharing Thoughts and Intersubjectivity
2: Christopher Peacocke: Communication in Music
3: Simon Prosser: Shared Egocentric Thoughts
4: José Luis Bermúdez: Frames, Senses, and Thought-Equivalence
5: Laura Schroeter and François Schroeter: Concepts as Shared Regulative Ideals
6: Imogen Dickie: Communication, Competence, and the Transmission of Knowledge
7: Guy Longworth: Thinking Together
8: Sarah Sawyer: An Externalist Shared Thought View of Communication, Agreement, and Disagreement
9: François Recanati: Sameness of Mode of Presentation
10: Rachel Goodman: Shared Thought and Communication
11: Manuel García-Carpintero: Coordination: A Presuppositional Account
12: Aidan Gray: Thinking the Same-ish
13: Andrea Onofri: Communication, Coordination, and the Flow of Information
14: Joey Pollock: Radical Holism and Disagreement