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Mindreading and Joint Action: Philosophical Tools (Autumn 2011-2)

by Stephen A. Butterfill

Description

This course will introduce a variety of new and established philosophical ideas that might usefully inform experimental research on mindreading or on joint action (or both) but have so far been neglected or misunderstood by cognitive scientists. Starting from foundational questions like What is a mental state? and Which events are actions? we shall search for tools that might help us with two tasks. First, we need theoretically coherent and empirically motivated ways of distinguishing kinds of mindreading, and kinds of joint action. Second, we need ways of decomposing mindreading in something like the way that actual reading can be decomposed into orthographic, lexical, syntactic, semantic and pragmatic components.

Course Outline

Download: course outline [pdf]

Lecture 01 : Introduction

handout [pdf], slides [pdf]

Lecture 02 : What Are Mental States?

handout [pdf], slides [pdf]

Lecture 03 : Tracking, Measuring and Representing Beliefs

handout [pdf], slides [pdf]

Lecture 04 : What is Core Knowledge (or Modularity)?

handout [pdf], slides [pdf]

Lecture 05 : Actions, Intentions and Goals

handout [pdf], slides [pdf]

Lecture 06 : Goal Ascription: the Teleological Stance and Motor Awareness

handout [pdf], slides [pdf]

Lecture 07 : What Is Joint Action?

handout [pdf], slides [pdf]

Lecture 08 : Shared Intention and Motor Representation in Joint Action

handout [pdf], slides [pdf]

Lecture 09 : Interacting Mindreaders

handout [pdf], slides [pdf]