Anti-Externalism This page intentionally left blank Anti-Externalism Joseph Mendola 1 1 GreatClarendonStreet,Oxfordox26dp OxfordUniversityPressisadepartmentoftheUniversityofOxford. ItfurtherstheUniversity’sobjectiveofexcellenceinresearch,scholarship, andeducationbypublishingworldwidein Oxford NewYork Auckland CapeTown DaresSalaam HongKong Karachi KualaLumpur Madrid Melbourne MexicoCity Nairobi NewDelhi Shanghai Taipei Toronto Withofficesin Argentina Austria Brazil Chile CzechRepublic France Greece Guatemala Hungary Italy Japan Poland Portugal Singapore SouthKorea Switzerland Thailand Turkey Ukraine Vietnam OxfordisaregisteredtrademarkofOxfordUniversityPress intheUKandincertainothercountries PublishedintheUnitedStates byOxfordUniversityPressInc.,NewYork ©JosephMendola2008 Themoralrightsoftheauthorhavebeenasserted DatabaserightOxfordUniversityPress(maker) Firstpublished2008 Allrightsreserved.Nopartofthispublicationmaybereproduced, storedinaretrievalsystem,ortransmitted,inanyformorbyanymeans, withoutthepriorpermissioninwritingofOxfordUniversityPress, orasexpresslypermittedbylaw,orundertermsagreedwiththeappropriate reprographicsrightsorganization.Enquiriesconcerningreproduction outsidethescopeoftheaboveshouldbesenttotheRightsDepartment, OxfordUniversityPress,attheaddressabove Youmustnotcirculatethisbookinanyotherbindingorcover andyoumustimposethesameconditiononanyacquirer BritishLibraryCataloguinginPublicationData Dataavailable LibraryofCongressCataloginginPublicationData Dataavailable TypesetbyLaserwordsPrivateLimited,Chennai,India PrintedinGreatBritain onacid-freepaperby BiddlesLtd,King’sLynn,Norfolk ISBN978–0–19–953499–9 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 For Allan Gibbard and Jaegwon Kim Acknowledgments I am grateful for help from Lily Griffin, Rowena Anketell, Patrick Arens, Bill Bauer, Catherine Berry, Tim Black, Brent Braga, Al Casullo, David Chavez, Ben Churley, Mark Cullison, Mark Decker, Cullen Gatten, John Gibbons, Danielle Hampton, AblaHasan, LeoIacono, Clayton Littlejohn, Tim Loughlin, Sally Markowitz, Peter Momtchiloff, Victoria Patton, Guy Rohrbaugh, J. D. Trout, Mark van Roojen, Kate Walker, and several anonymous referees. Thanks to Blackwell for permission to reuse material from my articles ‘A Dilemma for Asymmetric Dependence’, Nous 37 (2003), 232–57, and ‘Papineau on Etiological Teleosemantics for Beliefs’, Ratio 19 (2006),305–20. Contents 1. Introduction 1 PartI: OnSomeMisleadingCases 2. Externalist Cases and Internalist Theory 23 3. Internalist Cases and Externalist Theory 55 4. The Real Moral 77 PartII: Mind-BasedExternalism andSensory Content 5. Against Etiological Semantics 103 6. Non-Etiological Mind-Based Externalism 143 7. Qualia and Sensory Content 173 PartIII: Language-BasedExternalism andThoughtContent 8. Private Language and Privileged Access 223 9. Language, Truth, and Inference 253 10. Qualia Empiricism 305 Bibliography 329 Index 347 This page intentionally left blank 1 Introduction ThetruthisthatwhenIdaydreamaboutgreenumbrellasinlightrain,itdoes not require umbrellas, rain, anyone else, or any history. Likewise when I havesuchadesire,belief,orexperience.Butthisoldviewisnowunpopular. Internalism is the view that all the conditions that constitute a person’s thoughts and sensations are internal to their skin and contemporaneous, inside and now. Things outside my wall of skin cause my sensations and thoughts,andmanyofmythoughtsareabouttheoutside.Butthingsoutside are not constitutive parts of those mental states; they are not part of what makes them up. Let me be more precise. First, mental states of one type, say beliefs, often differ in content, much as declarative sentences differ in meaning.Considerbeliefsthatgrassisgreenandthatrainiswet.Beliefscan be about different things, and present the same things in different ways. It isbecauseofthisthattheyveridicallyornon-veridicallyrepresent.Second, some ways of typing mental states, say as knowledge and hence as true, clearly involve external conditions. And so now I can put it this way: According to internalism, my mental states of crucial and characteristic types—for instance my beliefs, desires, and sensations—would exist and retain their characteristic contents even if there were nothing outside me and no past, as long as what is currently inside my skin were unchanged. Externalism is the denial of internalism. It is the view that features of a person’s external environment or history are part of what constitutes that person’s beliefs, desires, and sensations. The natural kinds around me, the machinationsofmylinguisticcommunity,andmylearningorevolutionary history are some of the external resources that might partly constitute my experiences and thoughts.¹ ¹ Mendola(1997)callsexperiences‘thoughts’tostresstheirintensionalityandcapacityforfalsehood. ButhereIwilldeploymorefamiliarterminology.
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