ISBN : 9780198748182
The Rules of Thought develops a rationalist theory of mental content while defending a traditional epistemology of philosophy. Jonathan Jenkins Ichikawa and Benjamin W. Jarvis contend that a capacity for pure rational thought is fundamental to mental content itself and underwrites our quotidian reasoning and extraordinary philosophical engagement alike. Part I of the book develops a Fregean theory of mental content, according to which rational relations between propositions play a central role in individuating contents; the theory is designed to be sensitive not only to Frege's puzzle and other data that have motivated rationalist conceptions of content, but also to considerations in the philosophy of mind and language that have motivated neo-Russellian views. Part II articulates a theory of the a priori, and shows that, given the framework of Part I, it is very plausible that much philosophical work of interest is genuinely a priori. Notably, it is no part of the picture developed that intuitions have an important role to play, either in mental content, or in the epistemology of the a priori; Part III defends this departure from rationalist orthodoxy.
Introduction: Objective Rules of Thought
Part I: Propositions, Fregean Sense, and Rational Modality
1 A Fregean Theory of Propositional Attitudes
2 A Theory of Rational Modality
3 The Psychological Realization of Fregean Sense
4 The Sociability of a Fregean Theory
5 Fregean Sense First
Part II: Rationality, Apriority, and Philosophy
6 A Theory of the A Priori
7 A Priori Philosophy: Responses to Objections
8 The Content of Thought-Experiment Judgments
9 The Epistemology of Thought-Experiment Judgments
10 Rational Imagination and Modal Epistemology
Appendix A: The misidentification response
Appendix B: Natural kinds
Part III: Intuitions and Philosophy
11 The Nature of Intuitions
12 Against Strong Experiential Rationalism
13 Intuition as a Source of Evidence?
14 Experimental Philosophy and Philosophical Methodology
References
Index