|
Product Description
In our everyday social interactions, we try to make sense of what people are thinking, why they act as they do, and what they are likely to do next. This process is called mindreading. Mindreading, Shannon Spaulding argues in this book, is central to our ability to understand and interact with others. Philosophers and cognitive scientists have converged on the idea that mindreading involves theorizing about and simulating others’ mental states. She argues that this view of mindreading is limiting and outdated. Most contemporary views of mindreading vastly underrepresent the diversity and complexity of mindreading. She articulates a new theory of mindreading that takes into account cutting edge philosophical and empirical research on in-group/out-group dynamics, social biases, and how our goals and the situational context influence how we interpret others’ behavior.
Spaulding's resulting theory of mindreading provides a more accurate, comprehensive, and perhaps pessimistic view of our abilities to understand others, with important epistemological and ethical implications. Deciding who is trustworthy, knowledgeable, and competent are epistemically and ethically fraught judgments: her new theory of mindreading sheds light on how these judgments are made and the conditions under which they are unreliable.
This book will be of great interest to students of philosophy of psychology, philosophy of mind, applied epistemology, cognitive science and moral psychology, as well as those interested in conceptual issues in psychology.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- The Animal Mind
- The Routledge Handbook of Embodied Cognition (Routledge Handbooks in Philosophy)
- Mindshaping: A New Framework for Understanding Human Social Cognition (A Bradford Book)
- Bad Language (Contemporary Introductions to Philosophy of Language)
- The Implicit Mind: Cognitive Architecture, the Self, and Ethics
- Evaluative Perception (Mind Association Occasional Series)
- The Unity of Perception: Content, Consciousness, Evidence
- A Spirit of Trust: A Reading of Hegel's Phenomenology
- Do Apes Read Minds?: Toward a New Folk Psychology (The MIT Press)
- The Exchange of Words: Speech, Testimony, and Intersubjectivity
*If this is not the "How We Understand Others: Philosophy and Social Cognition (Routledge Focus on Philosophy)" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Dec 25, 2024 22:42 +08.