Experiential attitudes are propositional

  • Attitudinal propositionalism is the view that all mental attitude content is truth-evaluable. While attitudinal propositionalism is still silently assumed in large parts of analytic philosophy, recent work on objectual attitudes (i.e. attitudes like "fearing Moriarty" and "imagining a unicorn" that are reported through intensional transitive verbs with a direct object) has put attitudinal propositionalism under explanatory pressure. This paper defends propositionalism for a special subclass of objectual attitudes, viz. experiential attitudes. The latter are attitudes like seeing, remembering, and imagining whose grammatical objects intuitively denote (events or) scenes. I provide a propositional analysis of experiential attitudes that preserves the merits of propositionalism. This analysis uses the possibility of representing the target-scenes of experiential attitudes by the intersection of all propositions that are true in these scenes. I show that this analysis makes available the usual (Russellian) account of intensionality and the common (Boolean) logic for entailments.

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Metadaten
Author:Kristina LiefkeORCiDGND
URN:urn:nbn:de:hbz:294-91985
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1007/s10670-022-00534-w
Parent Title (English):Erkenntnis
Publisher:Springer Science + Business Media B.V.
Place of publication:Dordrecht
Document Type:Article
Language:English
Date of Publication (online):2022/08/04
Date of first Publication:2022/04/21
Publishing Institution:Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Universitätsbibliothek
Volume:2022
First Page:1
Last Page:25
Institutes/Facilities:Institut für Philosophie II
Dewey Decimal Classification:Philosophie und Psychologie / Philosophie
open_access (DINI-Set):open_access
Licence (English):License LogoCreative Commons - CC BY 4.0 - Attribution 4.0 International