John Henry McDowell,
FBA (born 7 March 1942) is a South African
philosopher
A philosopher is a person who practices or investigates philosophy. The term ''philosopher'' comes from the grc, φιλόσοφος, , translit=philosophos, meaning 'lover of wisdom'. The coining of the term has been attributed to the Greek th ...
, formerly a
fellow
A fellow is a concept whose exact meaning depends on context.
In learned or professional societies, it refers to a privileged member who is specially elected in recognition of their work and achievements.
Within the context of higher education ...
of
University College, Oxford
University College (in full The College of the Great Hall of the University of Oxford, colloquially referred to as "Univ") is a constituent college of the University of Oxford in England. It has a claim to being the oldest college of the univer ...
, and now university professor at the
University of Pittsburgh
The University of Pittsburgh (Pitt) is a public state-related research university in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The university is composed of 17 undergraduate and graduate schools and colleges at its urban Pittsburgh campus, home to the universit ...
. Although he has written on
metaphysics
Metaphysics is the branch of philosophy that studies the fundamental nature of reality, the first principles of being, identity and change, space and time, causality, necessity, and possibility. It includes questions about the nature of conscio ...
,
epistemology
Epistemology (; ), or the theory of knowledge, is the branch of philosophy concerned with knowledge. Epistemology is considered a major subfield of philosophy, along with other major subfields such as ethics, logic, and metaphysics.
Episte ...
,
ancient philosophy
This page lists some links to ancient philosophy, namely philosophical thought extending as far as early post-classical history ().
Overview
Genuine philosophical thought, depending upon original individual insights, arose in many cultures ...
, and
meta-ethics
In metaphilosophy and ethics, meta-ethics is the study of the nature, scope, and meaning of moral judgment. It is one of the three branches of ethics generally studied by philosophers, the others being normative ethics (questions of how one ought ...
, McDowell's most influential work has been in the
philosophy of mind
Philosophy of mind is a branch of philosophy that studies the ontology and nature of the mind and its relationship with the body. The mind–body problem is a paradigmatic issue in philosophy of mind, although a number of other issues are addre ...
and
philosophy of language
In analytic philosophy, philosophy of language investigates the nature of language and the relations between language, language users, and the world. Investigations may include inquiry into the nature of meaning, intentionality, reference, ...
. McDowell was one of three recipients of the 2010 Andrew W. Mellon Foundation's Distinguished Achievement Award, and is a Fellow of both the
American Academy of Arts & Sciences
The American Academy of Arts and Sciences (abbreviation: AAA&S) is one of the oldest learned societies in the United States of America, United States. It was founded in 1780 during the American Revolution by John Adams, John Hancock, James Bow ...
and the
British Academy
The British Academy is the United Kingdom's national academy for the humanities and the social sciences.
It was established in 1902 and received its royal charter in the same year. It is now a fellowship of more than 1,000 leading scholars span ...
.
McDowell has, throughout his career, understood philosophy to be "therapeutic" and thereby to "leave everything as it is" (
Ludwig Wittgenstein
Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgenstein ( ; ; 26 April 1889 – 29 April 1951) was an Austrian-British philosopher who worked primarily in logic, the philosophy of mathematics, the philosophy of mind, and the philosophy of language. He is considere ...
, ''
Philosophical Investigations
''Philosophical Investigations'' (german: Philosophische Untersuchungen) is a work by the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein, published posthumously in 1953.
''Philosophical Investigations'' is divided into two parts, consisting of what Wittgens ...
''), which he understands to be a form of
philosophical quietism (although he does not consider himself to be a "quietist"). The philosophical quietist believes that philosophy cannot make any explanatory comment about how, for example, thought and talk relate to the world but can, by offering re-descriptions of philosophically problematic cases, return the confused philosopher to a state of intellectual quietude. However, in defending this quietistic perspective McDowell has engaged with the work of leading contemporaries in such a way as to therapeutically dissolve what he takes to be philosophical error, while developing original and distinctive theses about language, mind and value. In each case, he has tried to resist the influence of what he regards as a misguided, reductive form of philosophical naturalism that dominates the work of his contemporaries, particularly in North America.
Life and career
McDowell was born in
Boksburg
Boksburg is a city on the East Rand of Gauteng province of South Africa. Gold was discovered in Boksburg in 1887. Boksburg was named after the State Secretary of the South African Republic, W. Eduard Bok. The Main Reef Road linked Boksburg ...
,
South Africa
South Africa, officially the Republic of South Africa (RSA), is the southernmost country in Africa. It is bounded to the south by of coastline that stretch along the South Atlantic and Indian Oceans; to the north by the neighbouring countri ...
and completed a B.A. at the
University College of Rhodesia and Nyasaland
The University of Zimbabwe (UZ) is a public university in Harare, Zimbabwe. It opened in 1952 as the University College of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, and was initially affiliated with the University of London. It was later renamed the University ...
. In 1963, he moved to
New College,
Oxford
Oxford () is a city in England. It is the county town and only city of Oxfordshire. In 2020, its population was estimated at 151,584. It is north-west of London, south-east of Birmingham and north-east of Bristol. The city is home to the ...
as a
Rhodes scholar
The Rhodes Scholarship is an international postgraduate award for students to study at the University of Oxford, in the United Kingdom.
Established in 1902, it is the oldest graduate scholarship in the world. It is considered among the world' ...
, where he earned another B.A. in 1965 and an M.A. in 1969. He taught at
University College, Oxford
University College (in full The College of the Great Hall of the University of Oxford, colloquially referred to as "Univ") is a constituent college of the University of Oxford in England. It has a claim to being the oldest college of the univer ...
, from 1966 until 1986, when he joined the faculty at the
University of Pittsburgh
The University of Pittsburgh (Pitt) is a public state-related research university in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The university is composed of 17 undergraduate and graduate schools and colleges at its urban Pittsburgh campus, home to the universit ...
, where he is now a University Professor. He has also been a visiting professor at many universities, including
Harvard University
Harvard University is a private Ivy League research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Founded in 1636 as Harvard College and named for its first benefactor, the Puritan clergyman John Harvard, it is the oldest institution of higher le ...
,
University of Michigan
, mottoeng = "Arts, Knowledge, Truth"
, former_names = Catholepistemiad, or University of Michigania (1817–1821)
, budget = $10.3 billion (2021)
, endowment = $17 billion (2021)As o ...
, and
University of California, Los Angeles
The University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) is a public land-grant research university in Los Angeles, California. UCLA's academic roots were established in 1881 as a teachers college then known as the southern branch of the California St ...
.
McDowell was elected a Fellow of the
British Academy
The British Academy is the United Kingdom's national academy for the humanities and the social sciences.
It was established in 1902 and received its royal charter in the same year. It is now a fellowship of more than 1,000 leading scholars span ...
in 1983 and a Fellow of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences
The American Academy of Arts and Sciences (abbreviation: AAA&S) is one of the oldest learned societies in the United States. It was founded in 1780 during the American Revolution by John Adams, John Hancock, James Bowdoin, Andrew Oliver, and ...
in 1992. In 2010 he received the
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation of New York City in the United States, simply known as Mellon Foundation, is a private foundation with five core areas of interest, and endowed with wealth accumulated by Andrew Mellon of the Mellon family of Pitts ...
Distinguished Achievement Award in the Humanities.
McDowell delivered the
John Locke Lectures
The John Locke Lectures are a series of annual lectures in philosophy given at the University of Oxford. Named for British philosopher John Locke, the Locke Lectures are the world's most prestigious lectures in philosophy, and are among the worl ...
in Philosophy at
Oxford University
Oxford () is a city in England. It is the county town and only city of Oxfordshire. In 2020, its population was estimated at 151,584. It is north-west of London, south-east of Birmingham and north-east of Bristol. The city is home to the ...
in 1991 (these became his book ''Mind and World''.) He has also given the Woodbridge Lectures at
Columbia University
Columbia University (also known as Columbia, and officially as Columbia University in the City of New York) is a private research university in New York City. Established in 1754 as King's College on the grounds of Trinity Church in Manhatt ...
in 1997 and the
Howison Lectures in Philosophy
The Howison Lectures in Philosophy are a lecture series established in 1919 by friends and former students of George Howison, who served as the Mills Professor of Intellectual and Moral Philosophy and Civil Polity at the University of California, ...
at the
University of California at Berkeley
The University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley, Berkeley, Cal, or California) is a public land-grant research university in Berkeley, California. Established in 1868 as the University of California, it is the state's first land-grant univ ...
in 2006.
He received an honorary degree from the
University of Chicago
The University of Chicago (UChicago, Chicago, U of C, or UChi) is a private research university in Chicago, Illinois. Its main campus is located in Chicago's Hyde Park neighborhood. The University of Chicago is consistently ranked among the b ...
in 2008.
Philosophical work
Early work
McDowell's earliest published work was in ancient philosophy, most notably including a translation of and commentary on
Plato
Plato ( ; grc-gre, Πλάτων ; 428/427 or 424/423 – 348/347 BC) was a Greek philosopher born in Athens during the Classical period in Ancient Greece. He founded the Platonist school of thought and the Academy, the first institution ...
's ''
Theaetetus''. In the 1970s he was active in the
Davidsonian project of providing a semantic theory for
natural language
In neuropsychology, linguistics, and philosophy of language, a natural language or ordinary language is any language that has evolved naturally in humans through use and repetition without conscious planning or premeditation. Natural languages ...
, co-editing (with
Gareth Evans) a volume of essays entitled ''Truth and Meaning''. McDowell edited and published Evans's influential posthumous book ''The Varieties of Reference'' (1982).
In his early work, McDowell was very much involved both with the development of the Davidsonian semantic programme and with the internecine dispute between those who take the core of a theory that can play the role of a theory of meaning to involve the grasp of truth conditions, and those, such as
Michael Dummett
Sir Michael Anthony Eardley Dummett (27 June 1925 – 27 December 2011) was an English academic described as "among the most significant British philosophers of the last century and a leading campaigner for racial tolerance and equality." He wa ...
, who argued that linguistic understanding must, at its core, involve the grasp of assertion conditions. If, Dummett argued, the core of a theory that is going to do duty for a theory of a meaning is supposed to represent a speaker's understanding, then that understanding must be something of which a speaker can manifest a grasp. McDowell argued, against this Dummettian view and its development by such contemporaries as
Crispin Wright
Crispin James Garth Wright (; born 21 December 1942) is a British philosopher, who has written on neo-Fregean (neo-logicist) philosophy of mathematics, Wittgenstein's later philosophy, and on issues related to truth, realism, cognitivism, skep ...
, both that this claim did not, as Dummett supposed, represent a Wittgensteinian requirement on a theory of meaning and that it rested on a suspect asymmetry between the evidence for the expressions of mind in the speech of others and the thoughts so expressed. This particular argument reflects McDowell's wider commitment to the idea that, when we understand others, we do so from "inside" our own practices: Wright and Dummett are treated as pushing the claims of explanation too far and as continuing
Willard Van Orman Quine
Willard Van Orman Quine (; known to his friends as "Van"; June 25, 1908 – December 25, 2000) was an American philosopher and logician in the analytic tradition, recognized as "one of the most influential philosophers of the twentieth century". ...
's project of understanding linguistic behaviour from an "external" perspective.
In these early exchanges and in the parallel debate over the proper understanding of Wittgenstein's remarks on rule-following, some of McDowell's characteristic intellectual stances were formed: to borrow a Wittgensteinian expression, the defence of a realism without empiricism, an emphasis on the human limits of our aspiration to objectivity, the idea that meaning and mind can be directly manifested in the action, particularly linguistic action, of other people, and a distinctive
disjunctive Disjunctive can refer to:
* Disjunctive population, in population ecology, a group of plants or animals disconnected from the rest of its range
* Disjunctive pronoun
* Disjunctive set
* Disjunctive sequence
* Logical disjunction
In logic, ...
theory of perceptual experience.
The latter is an account of perceptual experience, developed at the service of McDowell's realism, in which it is denied that the
argument from illusion
The argument from illusion is an argument for the existence of sense-data. It is posed as a criticism of direct realism.
Overview
Naturally-occurring illusions best illustrate the argument's points, a notable example concerning a stick: I have a ...
supports an indirect or representative theory of perception as that argument presupposes that there is a "highest common factor" shared by veridical and illusory (or, more accurately, delusive) experiences. (There is clearly a distinction between perceiving and acquiring a belief: one can see an "apparently bent" stick in the water but not believe that it is bent as one knows that one's experience is illusory. In illusions, you need not believe that things are as the illusory experiences represent them as being; in delusions, a person believes what their experience represents to them. So the argument from illusion is better described as an argument from delusion if it is to make its central point.)
In the classic argument from illusion (delusion) you are asked to compare a case where you succeed in perceiving, say, a cat on a mat, to the case where a trick of light deceives you and form the belief that the cat is on the mat, when it is not. The proponent of the argument then says that the two states of mind in these contrasting cases share something important in common, and to characterise this we need to introduce an idea like that of "sense data." Acquaintance with such data is the "highest common factor" across the two cases. That seems to force us into a concession that our knowledge of the external world is indirect and mediated via such sense data. McDowell strongly resists this argument: he does not deny that there is something psychologically in common between the subject who really sees the cat and the one that fails to do so. But that psychological commonality has no bearing on the status of the judger's state of mind from the point of view of assessing whether she is in a position to acquire knowledge. In favourable conditions, experience can be such as to make manifest the presence of objects to observers – that is perceptual knowledge. When we succeed in knowing something by perceiving it, experience does not fall short of the fact known. But this just shows that a successful and a failed perceptual thought have nothing interesting in common from the point of view of appraising them as knowledge.
In this claim that a veridical perception and a non-veridical perception share no highest common factor, a theme is visible which runs throughout McDowell's work, namely, a commitment to seeing thoughts as essentially individuable only in their social and physical environment, so called externalism about the mental. McDowell defends, in addition to a general externalism about the mental, a specific thesis about the understanding of demonstrative expressions as involving so-called "singular" or "Russellian" thoughts about particular objects that reflects the influence on his views of Gareth Evans. According to this view, if the putative object picked out by the demonstrative does not exist, then such an object dependent thought cannot exist – it is, in the most literal sense, not available to be thought.
Value theory
In parallel with the development of this work on mind and language, McDowell also made significant contributions to moral philosophy, specifically meta-ethical debates over the nature of moral reasons and moral objectivity. McDowell developed the view that has come to be known as secondary property realism, or sensibility or
moral sense theory Moral sense theory (also known as moral sentimentalism) is a theory in moral epistemology and meta-ethics concerning the discovery of moral truths. Moral sense theory typically holds that distinctions between morality and immorality are discovered b ...
. The theory proceeds via the device of an ideally virtuous agent: such an agent has two connected capacities. She has the right concepts and the correct grasp of concepts to think about situations in which she finds herself by coming to moral beliefs. Secondly, for such a person such moral beliefs are automatically over-riding over other reasons she may have and in a particular way: they "silence" other reasons, as McDowell puts it. He believes that this is the best way to capture the traditional idea that moral reasons are specially authoritative.
McDowell rejects the
Humean theory that every intentional action is the result of a combination of a belief and a desire, with the belief passively supplying a representation and the desire supplying the motivation. McDowell, following Thomas Nagel, holds that the virtuous agent's perception of the circumstances (i.e. her belief) justifies both the action and the desire. In order to understand the desire, we must understand the circumstances that the agent experienced and that compelled her to act. So, while the Humean thesis may be true about explanation, it is not true about the structure of justification— it should be replaced by Nagel's ''motivated desire theory''.
Implicit in this account is a theory of the metaphysical status of values: moral agents form beliefs about the moral facts, which can be straightforwardly true or false. However, the facts themselves, like facts about colour experience, combine anthropocentricity with realism. Values are not there in the world for any observer, for example, one without our human interest in morality. However, in that sense, colours are not in the world either, but one cannot deny that colours are both present in our experience and needed for good explanations in our common sense understanding of the world. The test for the reality of a property is whether it is used in judgements for which there are developed standards of rational argument and whether they are needed to explain aspects of our experience that are otherwise inexplicable. McDowell thinks that moral properties pass both of these tests. There are established standards of rational argument and moral properties fall into the general class of those properties that are both anthropocentric but real.
The connection between McDowell's general metaphysics and this particular claim about moral properties is that all claims about objectivity are to be made from the internal perspective of our actual practices, the part of his view that he takes from the later Wittgenstein. There is no standpoint from outside our best theories of thought and language from which we can classify secondary properties as "second grade" or "less real" than the properties described, for example, by a mature science such as physics. Characterising the place of values in our worldview is not, in McDowell's view, to downgrade them as less real than talk of quarks or the Higgs boson.
Later work: ''Mind and World'' (1994)
McDowell's later work reflects the influence of
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (; ; 27 August 1770 – 14 November 1831) was a German philosopher. He is one of the most important figures in German idealism and one of the founding figures of modern Western philosophy. His influence extends ...
,
P. F. Strawson
Peter Frederick Strawson (; 23 November 1919 – 13 February 2006) was an English philosopher. He was the Waynflete Professor of Metaphysical Philosophy at the University of Oxford (Magdalen College) from 1968 to 1987. Before that, he ...
,
Robert Brandom
Robert Boyce Brandom (born March 13, 1950) is an American philosopher who teaches at the University of Pittsburgh. He works primarily in philosophy of language, philosophy of mind and philosophical logic, and his academic output manifests both sys ...
,
Rorty and
Sellars; both ''Mind and World'' and the Woodbridge lectures focus on a broadly
Kantian
Kantianism is the philosophy of Immanuel Kant, a German philosopher born in Königsberg, Prussia (now Kaliningrad, Russia). The term ''Kantianism'' or ''Kantian'' is sometimes also used to describe contemporary positions in philosophy of mind, ...
understanding of intentionality, of the mind's capacity to represent. Influenced by Sellars's famous diagnosis of the "myth of the given" in traditional empiricism,
[Sellars argued that the blankly causal impingement of the external world on judgement failed to supply justification, as only something with a belief-like conceptual structure could engage with rational justification.] McDowell's goal in ''Mind and World'' is to explain how we are passive in our perceptual experience of the world, but active in conceptualizing it. In his account, he tries to avoid any connection with idealism, and develops an account of what Kant called the "spontaneity" of our judgement in perceptual experience.
''Mind and World'' rejects a reductively naturalistic account: what McDowell calls "bald naturalism." He contrasts this with his own "naturalistic" perspective in which the distinctive capacities of mind are a cultural achievement of our "second nature", an idea that he adapts from
Gadamer
Hans-Georg Gadamer (; ; February 11, 1900 – March 13, 2002) was a German philosopher of the continental tradition, best known for his 1960 '' magnum opus'', '' Truth and Method'' (''Wahrheit und Methode''), on hermeneutics.
Life
Family a ...
. The book concludes with a critique of
Quine's narrow conception of empirical experience and also a critique of
Donald Davidson's views on belief as inherently veridical, in which Davidson plays the role of the pure
coherentist
In philosophical epistemology, there are two types of coherentism: the coherence theory of truth; and the coherence theory of justification (also known as epistemic coherentism).
Coherent truth is divided between an anthropological approach, whic ...
.
In his later work, McDowell denies that there is any philosophical use for the idea of
nonconceptual content— the idea that our experience contains representations that are not conceptually structured. Starting with a careful reading of Sellars' "myth of the given", he argues that we need to separate the use of concepts in experience from a causal account of the pre-conditions of experience. He argues that the idea of "nonconceptual content" is philosophically unacceptable because it straddles the boundary between these two. This denial of nonconceptual content has provoked considerable discussion because other philosophers have claimed that scientific accounts of our mental lives (particularly in the
cognitive sciences) need this idea.
While ''Mind and World'' represents an important contemporary development of a Kantian approach to philosophy of mind and metaphysics, one or two of the uncharitable interpretations of Kant's work in that book receive important revisions in McDowell's later Woodbridge Lectures, published in the ''Journal of Philosophy'', Vol. 95, 1998, pp. 431–491. Those lectures are explicitly about Wilfrid Sellars, and assess whether or not Sellars lived up to his own critical principles in developing his interpretation of Kant (McDowell claims not). McDowell has, since the publication of ''Mind and World,'' largely continued to re-iterate his distinctive positions that go against the grain of much contemporary work on language, mind and value, particularly in North America where the influence of Wittgenstein has significantly waned.
Influences
McDowell's work has been heavily influenced by, among others,
GWF Hegel,
Aristotle
Aristotle (; grc-gre, Ἀριστοτέλης ''Aristotélēs'', ; 384–322 BC) was a Greek philosopher and polymath during the Classical period in Ancient Greece. Taught by Plato, he was the founder of the Peripatetic school of phil ...
,
Ludwig Wittgenstein
Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgenstein ( ; ; 26 April 1889 – 29 April 1951) was an Austrian-British philosopher who worked primarily in logic, the philosophy of mathematics, the philosophy of mind, and the philosophy of language. He is considere ...
,
P. F. Strawson
Peter Frederick Strawson (; 23 November 1919 – 13 February 2006) was an English philosopher. He was the Waynflete Professor of Metaphysical Philosophy at the University of Oxford (Magdalen College) from 1968 to 1987. Before that, he ...
,
David Wiggins
David Wiggins (born 1933) is an English moral philosopher, metaphysician, and philosophical logician working especially on identity and issues in meta-ethics.
Biography
David Wiggins was born on 8 March 1933 in London, the son of Norman ...
, and, especially in the case of his later work,
Wilfrid Sellars
Wilfrid Stalker Sellars (May 20, 1912 – July 2, 1989) was an American philosopher and prominent developer of critical realism, who "revolutionized both the content and the method of philosophy in the United States".
Life and career
His father ...
. Many of the central themes in McDowell's work have also been pursued in similar ways by his
Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh ( ) is a city in the Commonwealth (U.S. state), Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, United States, and the county seat of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, Allegheny County. It is the most populous city in both Allegheny County and Wester ...
colleague
Robert Brandom
Robert Boyce Brandom (born March 13, 1950) is an American philosopher who teaches at the University of Pittsburgh. He works primarily in philosophy of language, philosophy of mind and philosophical logic, and his academic output manifests both sys ...
(though McDowell has stated strong disagreement with some of Brandom's readings and appropriations of his work). Both have been influenced by
Richard Rorty
Richard McKay Rorty (October 4, 1931 – June 8, 2007) was an American philosopher. Educated at the University of Chicago and Yale University, he had strong interests and training in both the history of philosophy and in contemporary analytic phi ...
, in particular Rorty's ''
Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature
''Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature'' is a 1979 book by the American philosopher Richard Rorty, in which the author attempts to dissolve modern philosophical problems instead of solving them by presenting them as pseudo-problems that only exist ...
'' (1979). In the preface to ''Mind and World'' (pp. ix–x) McDowell states that "it will be obvious that Rorty's work is
..central for the way I define my stance here." McDowell's own work has been criticized for its "sometimes cryptic prose."
Publications
Books
* ''Plato, Theaetetus'', translated with notes (Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1973)
* (Editor) Gareth Evans, ''The Varieties of Reference'' (Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1982)
*''Mind and World'' (
Cambridge
Cambridge ( ) is a university city and the county town in Cambridgeshire, England. It is located on the River Cam approximately north of London. As of the 2021 United Kingdom census, the population of Cambridge was 145,700. Cambridge bec ...
,
Mass.:
Harvard University Press
Harvard University Press (HUP) is a publishing house established on January 13, 1913, as a division of Harvard University, and focused on academic publishing. It is a member of the Association of American University Presses. After the retirem ...
, 1994)
*''Mind, Value, and Reality'' (
Cambridge
Cambridge ( ) is a university city and the county town in Cambridgeshire, England. It is located on the River Cam approximately north of London. As of the 2021 United Kingdom census, the population of Cambridge was 145,700. Cambridge bec ...
,
Mass.:
Harvard University Press
Harvard University Press (HUP) is a publishing house established on January 13, 1913, as a division of Harvard University, and focused on academic publishing. It is a member of the Association of American University Presses. After the retirem ...
, 1998)
* ''Meaning, Knowledge, and Reality'' (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1998)
* ''Having the World in View: Essays on Kant, Hegel, and Sellars'' (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 2009)
* ''The Engaged Intellect: Philosophical Essays'' (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 2009)
Selected articles
* (with
Gareth Evans) "Introduction", in Gareth Evans and John McDowell, eds., ''Truth and Meaning'' (Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1976), pp. vii–xxiii; translated into Spanish: "Introducción a Verdad y Significado", Cuadernos de Crítica 37 (1984)
* "Truth Conditions, Bivalence, and Verificationism", ''ibid'', pp. 42–66
* "On the Sense and Reference of a Proper Name", ''Mind'' lxxxvi (1977), 159–85; reprinted in
Mark Platts, ed., ''Reference Truth and Reality'' (Routledge and Kegan Paul, London, 1980), pp. 141–66, and in A. W. Moore, ed., ''Meaning and Reference'' (Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1993), pp. 111–36; translated into Spanish: "Sobre el Sentido y la Referencia de un Nombre Propio", ''Cuadernos de Crítica 20'' (1983)
* "On 'The Reality of the Past'", in Christopher Hookway and Philip Pettit, eds., ''Action and Interpretation'' (CUP, Cambridge,1978), pp. 127–44
* "Are Moral Requirements Hypothetical Imperatives?", ''Aristotelian Society Supplementary'' Volume lii (1978), 13–29
* "Physicalism and Primitive Denotation", ''Erkenntnis'' xiii (1978), 131–52; reprinted in Platts, ed., op. cit., pp. 111–30
*"Virtue and Reason", ''The Monist'' lxii (1979), 331–50; reprinted in Stanley G. Clarke and Evan Simpson, eds., ''Anti-Theory in Ethics and Moral Conservatism'' (SUNY Press, Albany, 1989), pp. 87–109
* "Quotation and Saying That", in Platts, ed., op. cit., pp. 206–37
* "Meaning, Communication, and Knowledge", in Zak van Straaten, ed., ''Philosophical Subjects: Essays on the Work of P. F. Strawson'' (Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1980), pp. 117–39
* "The Role of Eudaimonia in Aristotle's Ethics", ''Proceedings of the African Classical Associations'' xv (1980), 1–14; reprinted in Amélie Oksenberg Rorty, ed., ''Essays on Aristotle's Ethics'' (University of California Press, Berkeley, Los Angeles, London, 1980), pp. 359–76
* "Anti-Realism and the Epistemology of Understanding", in Herman Parret and Jacques Bouveresse, eds., ''Meaning and Understanding'' (De Gruyter, Berlin and New York, 1981), pp. 225–48
* "Non-Cognitivism and Rule-Following", in Steven Holtzman and Christopher Leich, eds., ''Wittgenstein: To Follow A Rule'' (Routledge and Kegan Paul, London, 1981), pp. 141–62
* "Falsehood and Not-Being in Plato's Sophist", in Malcolm Schofield and Martha Craven Nussbaum, eds., ''Language and Logos: Studies in Ancient Greek Philosophy presented to G. E. L. Owen'' (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1982), pp. 115–34
* "Truth-Value Gaps", in ''Logic, Methodology and Philosophy of Science'' VI (North-Holland, Amsterdam, 1982), pp. 299–313
* "Criteria, Defeasibility, and Knowledge", ''Proceedings of the British Academy'' lxviii (1982), 455–79; reprinted in part in Jonathan Dancy, ed., ''Perceptual Knowledge'' (Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1988)
* "Aesthetic Value, Objectivity, and the Fabric of the World", in Eva Schaper, ed., ''Pleasure, Preference and Value'' (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1983), pp. 1–16
* "Wittgenstein on Following a Rule", ''Synthese'' 58 (1984), 325–363; reprinted in Moore, ed., ''Meaning and Reference'', pp. 257–93
* "De Re Senses", ''Philosophical Quarterly'' xxxiv (1984), 283–94; also in Crispin Wright, ed., ''Frege: Tradition and Influence'' (Blackwell, Oxford, 1984), pp. 98–l09
* "Values and Secondary Qualities", in Ted Honderich, ed., ''Morality and Objectivity'' (Routledge and Kegan Paul, London, 1985), pp. 110–29
* "In Defence of Modesty", in Barry Taylor, ed., ''Michael Dummett: Contributions to Philosophy'' (Martinus Nijhoff, Dordrecht, 1987), pp. 59–80
* ''Projection and Truth in Ethics'' (1987 Lindley Lecture), published by the University of Kansas
* "One Strand in the Private Language Argument", ''Grazer Philosophische Studien'' 33/34 (1989), 285–303
* "Mathematical Platonism and Dummettian Anti-Realism", ''Dialectica'' 43 (1989), 173–92
* "Peacocke and Evans on Demonstrative Content", ''Mind'' xcix (1990), 311–22
* "Intentionality De Re", in Ernest LePore and Robert van Gulick, eds. ''John Searle and His Critics'' (Blackwell, Oxford, 1991), pp. 215–25
* "Intentionality and Interiority in Wittgenstein", in Klaus Puhl, ed., ''Meaning Scepticism'' (De Gruyter, Berlin and New York, 1991), pp. 148–69
* "Putnam on Mind and Meaning", ''Philosophical Topics'' xx (1992), 35–48
* "Meaning and Intentionality in Wittgenstein's Later Philosophy", in Peter A. French, Theodore E. Uehling, Jr., and Howard K. Wettstein, eds., ''Midwest Studies in Philosophy'' Volume XVII: The Wittgenstein Legacy (University of Notre Dame Press, Notre Dame, 1992), pp. 40–52
* "Knowledge by Hearsay", in
B. K. Matilal and A. Chakrabarti, eds, ''Knowing from Words'' (Kluwer, Dordrecht, 1993; Synthese Library vol. 230), pp. 195–224
* "The Content of Perceptual Experience", ''Philosophical Quarterly'' xliv (1994), 190–205
* "Might there be External Reasons", in J. E. J. Altham and Ross Harrison, eds., ''World, Mind, and Ethics: Essays on the Ethical Philosophy of Bernard Williams'' (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1995), pp. 68–85
* "Eudaimonism and Realism in Aristotle's Ethics", in Robert Heinaman, ed., ''Aristotle and Moral Realism'' (University College London Press, London, 1995), pp. 201–18
* "Knowledge and the Internal", ''Philosophy and Phenomenological Research'' lv (1995), 877–93
* "Deliberation and Moral Development in Aristotle", in Stephen Engstrom and
Jennifer Whiting, eds., ''Aristotle, Kant and the Stoics'' (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1996), pp. 19–35
* "Two Sorts of Naturalism", in
Rosalind Hursthouse
Mary Rosalind Hursthouse (born 10 November 1943) is a British-born New Zealand moral philosopher noted for her work on virtue ethics. Hursthouse is Professor Emerita of Philosophy at the University of Auckland.
Biography
Born in Bristol, Englan ...
, Gavin Lawrence, and Warren Quinn, eds., ''Virtues and Reasons: Philippa Foot and Moral Theory'' (Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1996), pp. 149–79; translated into German ("Zwei Arten von Naturalismus"), ''Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie'' v (1997), 687–710
* "Another Plea for Modesty", in Richard Heck, Jnr., ed., ''Language, Thought, and Logic: Essays in Honour of Michael Dummett'' (Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1997), pp. 105–29
* "Reductionism and the First Person", in Jonathan Dancy, ed., ''Reading Parfit'' (Blackwell, Oxford, 1997), pp. 230–50
* "Some Issues in Aristotle's Moral Psychology", in Stephen Everson, ed., ''Companions to Ancient Thought: 4: Ethics'' (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1998), pp. 107–28
* "Referring to Oneself", in Lewis E. Hahn, ed., ''The Philosophy of P. F. Strawson'' (Open Court, Chicago and Lasalle, 1998), pp. 129–45
* "The Constitutive Ideal of Rationality: Davidson and Sellars", ''Crítica'' xxx (1998), 29–48
* "Having the World in View: Sellars, Kant, and Intentionality" (The Woodbridge Lectures, 1997), ''The Journal of Philosophy'', Vol. 95 (1998), 431–91
* "Sellars's Transcendental Empiricism", in Julian Nida-Rümelin, ed., ''Rationality, Realism, Revision'' (Proceedings of the 3rd international congress of the Society for Analytical Philosophy), Walter de Gruyter, Berlin and New York, 1999, pp. 42–51.
* "Scheme-Content Dualism and Empiricism", in Lewis E. Hahn, ed., ''The Philosophy of Donald Davidson'' (Open Court, Chicago and Lasalle, 1999), pp. 87–104
* "Towards Rehabilitating Objectivity", in Robert B. Brandom, ed., ''Rorty and His Critics'' (Blackwell, Malden, Mass. and Oxford, 2000), pp. 109–23
* "Experiencing the World" and "Responses", in Marcus Willaschek, ed., ''John McDowell: Reason and Nature: Lecture and Colloquium in Münster 1999'' (LIT Verlag, Münster, 2000), pp. 3–17, 93–117
* "Moderne Auffassungen von Wissenschaft und die Philosophie des Geistes", in Johannes Fried und
Johannes Süßmann, ed., ''Revolutionen des Wissens: Von der Steinzeit bis zur Moderne'' (Munich: C. H. Beck, 2001), 116–35. (Previously published in Philosophische Rundschau.)
* "Gadamer and Davidson on Understanding and Relativism", in Jeff Malpas, Ulrich Arnswald, and Jens Kertscher, eds., ''Gadamer's Century: Essays in Honor of Hans-Georg Gadamer'' (Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press, 2002), 173–94.
* "How not to read Philosophical Investigations: Brandom's Wittgenstein", in R. Haller and K. Puhl, eds., ''Wittgenstein and the Future of Philosophy: A Reassessment after 50 Years'' (Vienna: Holder, Pichler, Tempsky, 2002), pp. 245–56.
* "Knowledge and the Internal Revisited", ''Philosophy and Phenomenological Research'' lxiv (2002), 97–105.
* ''Wert und Wirklichkeit: Aufsätze zur Moralphilosophie'' (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 2002). (Translation by Joachim Schulte, with an Introduction by Axel Honneth and Martin Seel, of seven of the papers in my Mind, Value, and Reality.)
* "Hyperbatologikos empeirismos", ''Defkalion'' 21/1, June 2003, 65–90. (Translation into Greek of "Transcendental Empiricism", paper delivered at the Pitt/Athens symposium in Rethymnon, Crete, in 2000.)
* "Subjective, intersubjective, objective", ''Philosophy and Phenomenological Research'' lxvii (2003), 675–81. (Contribution to a symposium on a book by Donald Davidson.)
* ''Mente y Mundo'' (Spanish translation by Miguel Ángel Quintana-Paz of ''Mind and World''), Salamanca: Ediciones Sígueme, 2003.
* "L'idealismo di Hegel come radicalizazzione di Kant", in Luigi Ruggiu and Italo Testa, eds., ''Hegel Contemporaneo: la ricezione americana di Hegel a confronto con la traduzione europea'' (Milan: Guerini, 2003). (Previously in Iride for December 2001.)
* "Naturalism in the philosophy of mind", in
Mario de Caro and
David Macarthur
David Macarthur is an Australian philosopher and Professor of Philosophy at the University of Sydney who works primarily on skepticism, metaphysical quietism, pragmatism, liberal naturalism and philosophy of art (especially film, photography and a ...
, eds., ''Naturalism in Question'' (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 2004), 91–105. (Previously published in German translation as "Moderne Auffassungen von Wissenschaft und die Philosophie des Geistes", see above.)
* "Reality and colours: comment on Stroud", ''Philosophy and Phenomenological Research'' lxviii (2004), 395–400. (Contribution to a symposium on a book by Barry Stroud.)
* "The apperceptive I and the empirical self: towards a heterodox reading of 'Lordship and Bondage' in Hegel's Phenomenology", ''Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain'' 47/48, 2003, 1–16.
* "Hegel and the Myth of the Given", in Wolfgang Welsch und Klaus Vieweg, Herausg., ''Das Interesse des Denkens: Hegel aus heutiger Sicht'' (München: Wilhelm Fink Verlag, 2003), pp. 75–88.
References
Further reading
* Sandra M. Dingli, ''On Thinking and the World: John McDowell's Mind and World'', Ashgate, 2005
* Richard Gaskin, ''Experience and the World's Own Language: A Critique of John McDowell's Empiricism'', Oxford University Press, 2006 (See review essay by Jason Bridges at http://ndpr.nd.edu/review.cfm?id=8743)
*
Robert Maximilian de Gaynesford, ''John McDowell'', Blackwell / Polity Press, 2004
* Anne Le Goff & Christophe Al-Saleh (ed.) ''Autour de l'esprit et le monde de John McDowell'', Paris, Vrin, 2013
*Jakob Lingaard (ed.) ''John McDowell: Experience, Norm and Nature'', Blackwell, 2008
* Cynthia MacDonald & Graham MacDonald (eds.), ''McDowell and His Critics'', Blackwell, 2006
* Chauncey Maher, ''The Pittsburgh School of Philosophy: Sellars, McDowell, Brandom'', Routledge, 2012
* Joseph K. Schear (ed.) ''Mind, Reason, and Being-in-the-World: The McDowell-Dreyfus Debate'', Routledge, 2013
* Nicholas Smith (ed.), ''Reading McDowell: On Mind and World'', Routledge, 2002
* Tim Thornton, ''John McDowell'', Acumen Publishing, 2004
* Charles Macmillan Urban, Content and Concept: An Examination of Transcendental Empiricism, Semantic Scholar, 2013
* Marcus Willaschek (ed.), ''John McDowell: Reason and Nature'', Munster: Lit Verlag, 1999
External links
John McDowell – Philosophy – University of Pittsburgh
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