PHILOSOPHY OF MIND
Stampa
Enrollment year
2020/2021
Academic year
2021/2022
Regulations
DM270
Academic discipline
M-FIL/02 (LOGIC AND PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE)
Department
DEPARTMENT OF BRAIN AND BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Course
PSYCHOLOGY, NEUROSCIENCE AND HUMAN SCIENCES
Curriculum
PERCORSO COMUNE
Year of study
Period
2nd semester (01/02/2022 - 10/06/2022)
ECTS
6
Lesson hours
36 lesson hours
Language
English
Activity type
WRITTEN AND ORAL TEST
Teacher
DI FRANCESCO MICHELE (titolare) - 3 ECTS
PIREDDA GIULIA - 3 ECTS
Prerequisites
There are no formal prerequisites for this class. The class is designed so as to be accessible to students with no background in philosophy. A mild familiarity with basic philosophical issues, however, while not necessary, can be helpful.
Learning outcomes
After taking this course, the student should be able to identify and analyse some key problems in philosophy of mind, philosophy of psychology, philosophy of cognitive science, and to develop basic skills of philosophical analysis and argumentation.
Course contents
The course is ideally comprised of three – strongly connected – parts.
1. The nature of mental phenomena. What is the place of the mind in the world order? Are mental phenomena ontologically on a pair with physical phenomena? Is our knowledge of our ‘internal’ experience similar in kind with our knowledge of the external world? These questions will be tackled by means of an introduction to philosophy of mind, essentially focused on the place of mental phenomena in the natural order, according with the philosophical tradition inaugurated by Descartes. In this connection, theoretical issues such as the nature of the psychophysical relation (dualism(s), materialistic monism(s), functionalism, eliminativism, emergentism), the problems of mental causation, the “hard problem” of consciousness, the possibility of free will will be presented and discussed.
2. Functionalism and the cognitive sciences. Mental states are conceived by functionalism as the ‘software’ of the brain. In this sense, functionalism can be considered as the ‘official’ ideology of the so called ‘classical’ cognitive science, and the starting point for a mechanical view of thought. In this part the present state and prospects of functionalism will be discussed, also in connection with philosophical issues raised by contemporary development of artificial intelligence.
3. Embodiment and 4E cognitive science The view of the mind proposed by functionalism and classical cognitive science has been criticized in the last decades as being “individualistic” and not taking into account the embodied, embedded, extended and enactive nature of cognition. The situated cognition perspective, which broadly vindicates the role of the physical, cultural and social environment in cognition, will be introduced and the several versions and theses included in it will be discussed and analysed. This will also bring the discussion toward some topic of philosophy of technology, such as the notion of cognitive artefact and the role and impact of technology in our ordinary cognitive life.
Teaching methods
Frontal lectures will be accompanied by group discussions and class exercises.
Reccomended or required readings
- Pete Mandik, 2014, This Is Philosophy of Mind: An Introduction, Wiley Blackwell.
- Ravenscroft I., 2005, Philosophy of Mind. A Beginners Guide, Oxford University Press.
- Okasha, S. 2016. Philosophy of Science, Oxford University Press, (2nd Edition)
- Lawrence Shapiro, 2019, Embodied Cognition (2nd edition), Routledge.
- Mark Cain, 2015, Philosophy of Cognitive Science, Polity Press.
- Selected papers on the issues dealt with and/or instructors’ lecture slides.
Assessment methods
Written and oral exams
Further information
Some of the lecture slides will be downloadable from the dedicated website.
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