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Aug 1991
ISBN 0262660741
154 pp.
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Representation and Reality
Hilary Putnam

Hilary Putnam, who may have been the first philosopher to advance the notion that the computer is an apt model for the mind, takes a radically new view of his own theory of functionalism in this book. Putnam argues that in fact the computational analogy cannot answer the important questions about the nature of such mental states as belief, reasoning, rationality, and knowledge that lie at the heart of the philosophy of mind.

"Representation and Reality is one of the most thorough and careful criticisms of reductionism in the philosophy of mind that we have yet seen, and all future discussions of the computerhuman analogy will have to take account of it."
-- Richard Rorty, University of Virginia

"This clear, powerfully argued, and thoroughly accessible book is fascinating, and no one with a serious interest in the philosophy of mind or the philosophy of language can afford not to study it."
-- Stephen Schiffer, City University of New York

Hilary Putnam is Walter Beverly Pearson Professor of Mathematical Logic at Harvard University.

Table of Contents
 Preface
 Introduction
1 Meaning and Mentalism
2 Meaning, Other People, and the World
3 Fodor and Block on "Narrow Content"
4 Are There Such Things as Reference and Truth?
5 Why Functionalism Didn't Work
6 Other Forms of Functionalism
7 A Sketch of an Alternative Picture
 Appendix
 Notes
 Author Index
 
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