Singular Thought: Acquaintance, Semantic Instrumentalism, and Cognitivism
Top Cited Papers
- 3 June 2010
- book chapter
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP)
Abstract
What are the conditions on singular thought and what are the mechanisms of singular thought generation? The reigning view is that singular thinking is limited to objects of acquaintance. The alternative position, Semantic Instrumentalism, is that singular thoughts can be manufactured at will by manipulating semantics, that is, by introducing, and fixing the reference of a referential term with a description that the object uniquely satisfies. This chapter presents arguements that neither account will do, and offers a new theory, Cognitivism, that remedies certain problems. Like acquaintance views, Cognitivism limits singular thought, but the limitations are not strictly epistemic, but rather, cognitive, associated with the goals, interests, plans, and affective states of the thinker. Like Semantic Instrumentalism, it accounts for how semantics affects the origination of singular thought, while denying that agents control singular thought production. This chapter draws on findings in vision science and object perception to explain how Cognitvism supports a mental file analysis of singular thought, one that is rooted in the interplay between our evolutionarily develped cognitive goals, object perception, and the liguistic and cognitive functions of directly referential terms.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- II. The Gift of LifePhilosophy & Public Affairs, 2008
- SOAMES ON DESCRIPTIVE REFERENCE‐FIXINGPhilosophical Issues, 2006
- Reference without ReferentsPublished by Oxford University Press (OUP) ,2005
- Donnellan on Neptune*Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 2001
- Auditory and visual objectsCognition, 2001
- Ways of Taking a MeterPhilosophical Studies, 2000
- Tracking Multiple Items Through Occlusion: Clues to Visual ObjecthoodCognitive Psychology, 1999
- The reviewing of object files: Object-specific integration of informationCognitive Psychology, 1992
- Attitudes De Dicto and De SeThe Philosophical Review, 1979
- Belief De ReThe Journal of Philosophy, 1977