CFP: Interpretivism, mental fictionalism and folk psychology
Submission deadline: September 9, 2024
Conference date(s):
November 7, 2024 - November 8, 2024
Conference Venue:
Department of Philosophy, University of Tartu
Tartu,
Estonia
Topic areas
Details
Folk psychology serves as our common conceptual framework for understanding mental phenomena and shaping and regulating behavior. Interpretivism is a view on mental phenomena that considers them to be constitutively bound with interpretation. In some versions, it amounts to the claim that to have a mental state (e.g., a belief) is to be interpretable as having this belief. Mental fictionalism, a more recent position, views folk psychological ascriptions of mental states as fictional statements that are useful but not literally true. It remains an open question whether interpretivism and mental fictionalism are competitors or allies, a question that the workshop aims to explore. Specifically, the workshop seeks to:
- clarify the relationship between interpretivism and fictionalism regarding folk psychology;
- consider the pros and cons of interpretivism and mental fictionalism;
- advance interpretivist and fictionalist positions further.
We have a few vacant slots in the workshop schedule and invite you to submit abstracts of approximately 300 words for 45-minute presentations (including Q&A). Please note that unfortunately, we are not able to cover accommodation and travel expenses for speakers whose abstracts are accepted.
Abstracts should be sent to [email protected].
Deadline of submissions: September 9, 2024.
Notification of acceptance: September 23, 2024.