From Folk Psychology To Cognitive Science: A Case Against Belief
Stephen Stich
The MIT Press (1985)
In Collection
#13
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Belief And Doubt, Cognition, Cognitive Science, Psychology
Paperback 9780262690928
English
The average person has a rich belief system about the thoughts and motives of people. From antiquity to the beginning of this century, Stephen Stich points out, this "folk psychology" was employed in such systematic psychology as there was: "Those who theorized about the mind shared the bulk of their terminology and their conceptual apparatus with poets, critics, historians, economists, and indeed with their own grandmothers."In this book, Stich puts forth the radical thesis that the notions of believing, desiring, thinking, prefering, feeling, imagining, fearing, remembering and many other common-sense concepts that comprise the folk psychological foundations of cognitive psychology should not - and do not - play a significant role in the scientific study of the mind.Stephen P. Stich is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Maryland.
Product Details
Dewey 153.01
Cover Price $25.00
No. of Pages 280
Height x Width 8.9 x 5.8  inch
Personal Details
Read It Yes
Notes
1983