CLEA Invites - Frances Egan on "Deflating Mental Representation"
Frances Egan (Rutgers - New Brunswick), Krzysztof (Krys) Dolega (Université Libre de Bruxelles)

March 21, 2025, 11:00am - 1:00pm

This event is online

Organisers:

Jesuit Faculty of Philosophy and Theology
Federal University of Lavras

Topic areas

Details

This is the third session of the new online series Foundations of Cognitive Sciences, in which researchers from all over the world discuss key foundational issues within the philosophy of cognitive sciences.

In this event, Professor Frances Egan is going to present us some elements of her just released book (March 2025), Deflating Mental Representation.

Registration

Everyone is invited to participate! Please register in order to get the link to the session.

Series

Foundations of Cognitive Sciences

Speaker

Frances Egan (Rutgers University)

Commentator

Krzysztof Dolega (Université Libre de Bruxelles)

Book

Deflating Mental Representation

Description

A novel account of the explanatory role of representation in both the cognitive sciences and commonsense practice that preserves the virtues without the defects of the prevailing two views about mental representation.

Philosophers of mind tend to hold one of two broad views about mental representation: they are either robustly realist about mental representations, taking them to have determinate, objective content independent of attributors’ explanatory interests and goals, or they embrace some form of anti-realism, holding that mental representations are at best useful fictions. Neither view is satisfactory. In Deflating Mental Representation, Frances Egan develops and defends a distinctive third way—a view she calls a deflationary account of mental representation—that both resolves philosophical worries about content and best fits actual practice in science and everyday life.

According to Egan’s deflationary account, appeal to mental representation does indeed pick out causes of behavior, but the attribution of content to these causes is best understood as a pragmatically motivated gloss, justified in part by attributors’ explanatory interests and goals. Content plays an explanatory role in the deflationary account, but one quite different than that assumed by robust representational realists. Egan also develops a novel account of perceptual experience as a kind of modeling of our inner lives by aspects of external reality and explains the role of appeal to representation in this process.

URL

https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262551601/deflating-mental-representation/

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Registration

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March 21, 2025, 2:00pm UTC

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