Dose the Conceptual Interdependency of Belief and Desire Undermine the Normativity of Content?
Publish place: Philosophical Investigations، Vol: 9، Issue: 17
Publish Year: 1394
Type: Journal paper
Language: English
View: 496
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JR_PHILO-9-17_005
Index date: 25 December 2016
Dose the Conceptual Interdependency of Belief and Desire Undermine the Normativity of Content? abstract
The normativity of mental content thesis appears to have been influential in contemporary philosophy of mind. Paul Boghossian (2003, 2005) has developed an argument for the normativity of mental content on the basis of two premises, i.e. firstly, the normativity of the notion of belief and secondly, the priority of the notion of belief to the notion of desire. In his recent article Alexander Miller (2008) has criticised Boghossian’s argument for the normativity of mental content. To make the objection against the normativity of content, Miller has argued that the second premise of Boghossian’s argument is mistaken since belief and desire are conceptually interdependent. My purpose in this paper is to show that content normativity thesis prevails Miller's attack. In order to establish the claim I will argue that content is normative even if belief and desire are conceptually interdependent.
Dose the Conceptual Interdependency of Belief and Desire Undermine the Normativity of Content? Keywords:
Dose the Conceptual Interdependency of Belief and Desire Undermine the Normativity of Content? authors
Seyed Ali Kalantari
Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Esfahan University, Iran