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Matter in Mind: Matter in Mind

Matter in Mind

Matter in Mind

Index

Abstract thought, 3, 204

Abstraction, 56, 149, 237

Addis, L., 240

Aesthetic judgment. See Judgment

Affinity, xi, Chapter Four passim, 171; transcendental vs. empirical, 95-98, 228

Agent causality, 34

Allison, H., 63, 80, 112, 209, 222, 224, 227, 232, 233, 234, 235, 236, 242

Ameriks, K., 238

Analogies of Experience: first, 190-94; second, 186-88; third, 188-90

Analytic judgments, 4, 47, 204, 219, 220

Analytic of Principles, Chapter Seven passim, 205

Analytic unity of consciousness, 119, 233

Anscombe, G. E. M., 241

Anticipation and retention: and consciousness, 152-57, 165-76; and modalities of judgment, 181, 195-97; as object-directed, 60; in imaginative judgment, 194; of higher order, 78, 132, 154, 179, 182-84; two kinds of, 67-72, 82, 94, 186

Anticipation-in-retention, 199-200

Appearance, Chapter One passim, 238; and phenomenalism, 25, 90; as reality, 26; matter in, 7, 43; transcendental us. empirical sense, 7

Apperception, 51, 89, 94, 115-18, 139-41, Chapter Six passim, 179-80, 187. See also Consciousness, unity of

Aristotle, 117, 230

Armstrong, D. M., 238

Association, 71-74, Chapter Four passim, 123-25, 136-38; two kinds of, 88

Baum, M., 222, 233, 235, 236

Beck, L. W., 125, 230, 234

Becker, W., 239

Belief, 3, 198, 206

Bencivenga, E., 210, 213

Bennett, J., 50, 224, 225, 238

Berkeley, G., 227

Bernard, J. H., 230

Bird, G., 225, 238

Body, 240

Brentano, F., 213

Brouillet, R., 235

Buchdal, G., 230

Castañeda, H.-N., 239

Categories, 6, 58, 79, 118, 139-46, 148, 174, Chapter Seven passim, 204, 210, 223, 232, 236

Causal theory of perception, 28, 91, 212

Causality. See Analogies, second, third, Law

Chipman, L., 225

Chisholm, R., 213

Circularity, alleged, in phenomenalist accounts, 29

Colors, 7-8, 95, 211

Combination, 116-17, 132, 145

Concepts: and anticipation, 28; and content, 23; and dispositions, 30; and mediate representation, 4; as “applied,” 25, 28, 51, 54, 134, 177, 214; as aspects of consciousness, 2, 57; as formed, x, 32, 50, 54-55, 81, 113, 136, 139, 153-54, 200, 205, 208, 221; as functions of unity, 15; as meanings, 207; as Merkmale, 56, 119-20, 130, 222, 233, 234, 237; as predicates, 57, 75, 185, 207; as rules, 6, 62, 74-79, 94, 183-86, 206, 223, 224, 241; mathematical, 221; matter for, 52, 58, 66, 177-86, 203-4, 210, 221, 236; origin of, 222; “reductionistic” account of, xii, 55; sameness of, 207; simple, 204

Conceptualization, 4, 9, 27, 81, 174, 206, 211

Consciousness, 5, 49, Chapter Six, 206, 208, 225, 228, 233, 238, 239; animal, x, 24, 66, 181-83; as form, ix, 57, 209, 223; clairty of, 149, 209; levels of, 155, 210; of objects, 150-55; self-, as a priori, 180; self-determinate vs. indeterminate, 160-76, 183-84, 239; unity of, ix, 57, 87, 90-92, 118-20, 129-41, 144, Chapter Six passim, 179-81, 209, 223, 236. See also Apperception

Constitution, 1

Constitutive/regulative distinction, 104

Content, 13, 15, 21, 52, 215

Correlate. See Intentional correlates

Critique of Judgment, xi, 98

Croce, B.: and Kant, 46-48, 219; hostile to Husserl, 47; on pseudo-concepts, 47-48, 220; on the construction of Nature, 47-48

Dahlstrohm, D., 225, 226

Davidson, D., 213

Deleuze, G., 221

Demonstrative content, 23

Dennett, D., 214

Descartes, R., 150

Dispositions, 33-35, 55, 68, 156, 168, 206

Dreyfus, H., 215, 216-17

Dryden, J., 237

Dryer, D. P., 242

Erkenntnis, xiv, 3, 128, 204

Expression, 220, 234

Fink, E., 218

Føllesdal, D., 216-17

Form: of intuition, 8, 10, 59, 111-14, 128-29, 145, 155; of judgment, 54, 121, 135, 139, 145-46, 147, 177, 181-82, 205, 208, 213, 222. See also Concepts

Förster, E., 234

Frege, G., 41

Functionalism, xiii, 15, 21, 31, 68-70, 78, 156, 206

Gallagher, S., 218

Garin, E., 219

Gendlin, E., 211

George, R., 210

Graham, G., 240

Gram, M., 80, 210, 226

Ground of affinity, 97

Ground of association, 86-88, 93-95, 137

Guyer, P., 179, 227, 237, 238

Hallucination, 10

Hegel, G. W. F., 45, 219

Heidegger, M., 52, 75, 221, 227

Henrich, D., 126

Hossenfelder, M., 223, 226

Hume, D., 98, 124, 137, 189, 229, 234

Husserl: on “motivation,” 45, 218; on noema, 41; on non-intuitional thoughts, 43; on object-directedness, 40; on protention and retention, 225; on re-identification, 42; on self, 240; on “sensation,” 44, 217-18

Images, 18, 24-25, 94, 226

Imagination, x-xi, 2-5, 9-12, 14-21, 24-25; and consciousness, 49, 71; and understanding as “friends,” 51; as form, xi; as intuition, 70, 225; as object-directed, 9, 16, 211; conceptualization of objects in, 9; productive vs. reproductive, 45, 82-84, 135-36, 233; transcendental, 83, 115. See also Anticipation and retention, Synthesis

Indeterminacy, 38

Inner sense, 170-71, 211, 224, 234

Intentional correlates, xi, 1, 7, 25-28, 44, 59, 61, 84, 90-95, 111, 124-25, 142-46, 165-73, 184, 196, 212, 217, 220

Intentionality, 35

Interpretation as reconstructive, xiii, 204

Intuition, Chapter One passim; as formed, 12; as state, 2; pure, 5, 224. See also Form

Judgment: about the past, 194-201; aesthetic, 99-103, 125; animal, 69; as intuition, 3; non-intuitional, 204-5; perception and experience, 120-26, 136-39, 145; pre-predicative, 154; problematic, 181, 205, 210; reflective, 103-6, 230-31. See also Concepts, Form

Kant, unclarity of, 230, 232

Kenny, A., 241

Kern, I., 217, 218

Kitcher, P., 214, 226, 238, 240

Knowledge, 3, 104, 206, 231. See also Erkenntnis

Kulstad, M., 239

Langsdorf, L., 216

Language, 206-7, 234

Larabee, J., 216

Law, 31, 96, 105, 230-31

Leibniz, G. W., 112, 149-50, 239

Locke, J., 150

Malcolm, N., 213

Manifold of intuition, 58-67, 202, 224; in single intutitions, 65, 93, 109, 114, 131, 136, 141, 225; in space and time, 59-61, 67, 110-14, unity of, 116, 126, 131; “unorganized,” 232

Matter: and content, 21, 52, 66. See also Appearance, Concepts

McIntyre, R., 217

Meerbote, R., 214 Melnick, A., 209, 242

Metaphysical Deduction, 135, 139, 143, 145, 147, 205, 210

Mohanty, J. N., 216

Nagel, G., 241

Nagel, T., 241

Nature: order of, 83, 87-92, 96

Necessity, 85, 104, 176, 177-82, 190, 231. See also Law

Nelkin, N., 240

Noesis/noema, xi-xiii, 48, 61, 65, 130, 140, 147, 216, 227, 232

Noumenal subject, 174, 233

Nowotny, V., 231, 232, 235

Object-directedness, 2, 8-12, 20, 45, 60, 216

Objects, 25, 129, 141, 144, 164, 175, 235

Pain, 168, 240

Paton, H. J., 56, 62, 97-98, 221, 223, 225, 226, 227, 228, 233, 239

Peacocke, C., 213

Phenomenal Quality: and concepts, 24; in appearance, 11, 168; in imagination, 17, 20, 24

Phenomenalism, xiii, 11, 26, 123, 187, 199, 214, 224, 233

Pippin, R., 76, 214, 223, 226, 232

Plato, 117

Pleasure, 102, 229, 230

Pope, A., 237

Posy, C., 214

Potter, E., 234

Prauss, G., 215, 232, 234

Prolegomena. See Judgment, of perception and experience

Protention, 225

Psychologism, 207

Purposiveness, 99, 229

Quantity and quality, 241

Realität, 7, 212

Reality, 12, 144, 212-13, 219

Reid, T., 150

Reflective judgment. See Judgment

“Refutation of Idealism,” 12, 159, 175, 191, 212

Re-identification, 42

Representation, ix., 2

Reproduktion, 68, 71

Retention, x, 152, 186, 195, 225, 236. See also Anticipation and retention

Rigid designation, 217

Robinson, H., 232, 234, 235

Rosenberg, J., 238, 241

Sartre, J.-P., xii, 166, 170, 240

Sasso, G., 219

Schematism, 74-81, 223, 235

Schrader, G., 221

Schwyzer, H., 225

Searle, J.: on concepts, 37-38; on intentional content, 35-40, 215; on non-intentional Background, 38-40, 215-16; on object-directed-ness, 36, 39

Second-edition Deduction, 45, 52, 55, Chapter Five, 178, 222; two stages of, 110, 126-46

Seeing-as, 40, 91, 206

Sein, 212

Self-ascription, 132-33, Chapter Six passim

Self-concept, 172, 240, 241

Self-knowledge, 150, 175

Sellars, W., 213

Sensation, xi, 6-8, 10-12, 24-25, 28, 168, 206, 211, 212, 219, 223

Sense data, 1, 13, 218

Smith, D. W., 217

Smith, N. K., 65, 66, 78, 93, 94, 117, 119, 132, 136, 145, 209, 224, 225, 226, 228, 232, 233, 236, 239, 242

Sokolowski, R., 216

Space and time: as objects, 60, 111-15, 120, 128-31, 140; singularity of, 128, 130; unity of, 235. See also Manifold of intuition, Time

Spontaneity, 32, 115, 135, 157

Stephens, G., 240

Stich, S., 33, 213

Strawson, P. F., 63, 239

Subjectivism, 1, 6

Subsumption, 232

Supreme Being, 229

Swing, T. K., 226

Synthesis, Chapter Three, 108-20, 148-49, 224; figurative, 115, 135-36; of apprehension, 73-74, 85, 116, 144; of recognition, 116, 151-57, 178; of reproduction, 68, 73, 84-95, 151-57, 178; unity of, 233. See also Anticipation and retention, Consciousness, unity of, Manifold of intuition

Synthetic a priori, 208

Thöle, B., 231, 232, 235

Time, 110, 165-73, 240; as substratum, 190-94, 242. See also Space and time

Transcendental Aesthetic, xiii, Chapter One passim, 44, 60, 111-15, 168, 202-3, 211

Transcendental Dialectic, 98-99, 103, 105-6

Translation, 13, 15-16, 24

Ujvari, M., 239

Valentini, F., 219

Validity of Kant’s argument, 174, 188, 190, 194, 208, 240

Wagner, H., 231, 232, 234, 235

Wahrnehmung, 235

Walker, R. C. S., 225

Warnock, G. J., 225

Wilkerson, T. M., 209

Wilson, M., 234

Wissen, 231

Wittgenstein, L., 225

Wohlfart, G., 229

Wolff, C., 149, 151

Wolff, R. P., 223, 224, 227, 228, 239

Zemach, E., 213

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