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Single Idea 3131
[filed under theme 17. Mind and Body / E. Mind as Physical / 3. Eliminativism
]
Full Idea
Quine expresses the instrumental version of eliminativism.
Gist of Idea
Quine expresses the instrumental version of eliminativism
Source
report of Willard Quine (Word and Object [1960]) by Georges Rey - Contemporary Philosophy of Mind Int.3
Book Ref
Rey,Georges: 'Contemporary Philosophy of Mind' [Blackwell 1997], p.7
The
29 ideas
from 'Word and Object'
4630
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Two theories can be internally consistent and match all the facts, yet be inconsistent with one another
[Quine, by Baggini /Fosl]
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3131
|
Quine expresses the instrumental version of eliminativism
[Quine, by Rey]
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3988
|
Indeterminacy of translation also implies indeterminacy in interpreting people's mental states
[Dennett on Quine]
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6891
|
Quine's naturalistic and empirical view is based entirely on first-order logic and set theory
[Quine, by Mautner]
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6310
|
Enquiry needs a conceptual scheme, so we should retain the best available
[Quine]
|
6311
|
The firmer the links between sentences and stimuli, the less translations can diverge
[Quine]
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6312
|
We can never precisely pin down how to translate the native word 'Gavagai'
[Quine]
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6313
|
Stimulus synonymy of 'Gavagai' and 'Rabbit' does not even guarantee they are coextensive
[Quine]
|
6314
|
Weird translations are always possible, but they improve if we impose our own logic on them
[Quine]
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6317
|
Dispositions to speech behaviour, and actual speech, are never enough to fix any one translation
[Quine]
|
6315
|
We should be suspicious of a translation which implies that a people have very strange beliefs
[Quine]
|
12798
|
Plurals can in principle be paraphrased away altogether
[Quine]
|
16462
|
The quest for ultimate categories is the quest for a simple clear pattern of notation
[Quine]
|
8464
|
Physical objects in space-time are just events or processes, no matter how disconnected
[Quine]
|
8482
|
Mathematicians must be rational but not two-legged, cyclists the opposite. So a mathematical cyclist?
[Quine]
|
12136
|
Cyclist are not actually essentially two-legged
[Brody on Quine]
|
8504
|
Quine aims to deal with properties by the use of eternal open sentences, or classes
[Quine, by Devitt]
|
15725
|
Normal conditionals have a truth-value gap when the antecedent is false.
[Quine]
|
15720
|
What stays the same in assessing a counterfactual antecedent depends on context
[Quine]
|
15722
|
Conditionals are pointless if the truth value of the antecedent is known
[Quine]
|
15719
|
We feign belief in counterfactual antecedents, and assess how convincing the consequent is
[Quine]
|
15721
|
Counterfactuals are plausible when dispositions are involved, as they imply structures
[Quine]
|
15490
|
Explain unmanifested dispositions as structural similarities to objects which have manifested them
[Quine, by Martin,CB]
|
15723
|
Either dispositions rest on structures, or we keep saying 'all things being equal'
[Quine]
|
15724
|
Counterfactuals have no place in a strict account of science
[Quine]
|
17594
|
We can paraphrase 'x=y' as a sequence of the form 'if Fx then Fy'
[Quine]
|
7924
|
The notion of a physical object is by far the most useful one for science
[Quine]
|
17905
|
Any progression will do nicely for numbers; they can all then be used to measure multiplicity
[Quine]
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9556
|
Nearly all of mathematics has to quantify over abstract objects
[Quine]
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