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Joëlle Proust

Institut Jean Nicod
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  •  Publications
    108
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 More details
  • Institut Jean Nicod
    Department of Philosophy- CNRS
    Regular Faculty
Homepage
Areas of Specialization
Philosophy of Action
Philosophy of Mind
Philosophy of Cognitive Science
Areas of Interest
Epistemology
Philosophy of Mind
Philosophy of Biology
  • All publications (108)
  •  24
    Ein Lösungsvorschlag zum Problem der repräsentationalen Basis tierischer Metakognition
    In Wolfgang Welsch, Christian Tewes & Klaus Vieweg (eds.), Natur und Geist: über ihre evolutionäre Verhältnisbestimmung, Akademie Verlag. pp. 205. 2011.
  •  169
    Formal logic as transcendental in Wittgenstein and Carnap
    with Jill Vance Buroker
    Noûs 21 (4): 501-520. 1987.
    Ludwig WittgensteinCarnap: Philosophy of LogicCarnap's Intellectual Context
  • Questions de forme. Logique et proposition analytique de Kant à Carnap
    Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 51 (4): 712-713. 1989.
  •  220
    Criticial Review of: When self-consciousness breaks, by G. Lynn Stephens & G. Graham
    Philosophical Psychology 15 (4): 543-550. 2002.
    The book under review offers two important contributions. One is a valuable discussion of the various ways of addressing the paradoxical experience of externality. The other is an emphasis on a distinction between the experience of subjectivity and the experience of agency. This review tries to show that this distinction is indeed a crucial feature in any solution to the question of externality, but that it is associated with a view of thinking as acting that is questionable
    Self-Consciousness in PsychologySelf-Consciousness in ExperienceSchizophrenia
  •  34
    Précis de La Nature de la Volonté et Disputatio
    Philosophiques 0-00. 2008.
    Cet article résume l'ouvrage paru en 2005 et répond aux objections de Stéphane Chauvier, Daniel Laurier et Pierre Livet dans le cadre d'une disputatio organisée par la revue Philosophiques
  •  26
    Agency in schizophrenia from a control theory viewpoint
    Experience of agency in patients with schizophrenia involves an interesting dissociation; these patients demonstrate that one can have a thought or perform an action consciously without being conscious of thinking or acting as the motivated agent, author of that thought or of that action. This chapter examines several interesting accounts of this dissociation, and aims at showing how they can be generalized to thought insertion phenomena. It is argued that control theory allows such a generaliza…Read more
    Experience of agency in patients with schizophrenia involves an interesting dissociation; these patients demonstrate that one can have a thought or perform an action consciously without being conscious of thinking or acting as the motivated agent, author of that thought or of that action. This chapter examines several interesting accounts of this dissociation, and aims at showing how they can be generalized to thought insertion phenomena. It is argued that control theory allows such a generalization; three different comparators need to be distinguished: the sense of subjectivity relies on a comparator in which motivation and emotion play a structuring role. The sense of agency emerges in a system that delivers a rough categorization of self-generated – versus other- generated – actions and mental activities. A third system specializes in the social evaluation of the effects of an action, intention or other thought process, given certain goals in self or in others.
    Consciousness and Psychology
  •  233
    Mind, space and objectivity in non-human animals
    Erkenntnis 51 (1): 545-562. 1999.
    This article is a summary of two chapters of a book published in French in 1997, entitled Comment L'esprit vient aux Bêtes, Paris, Gallimard. The core idea is that the crucial distinction between internal and external states, often used uncritically by theorists of intentionality, needs to be made on a non-circular basis. The proposal is that objectivity - the capacity to reidentify individuals as the same across places and times depends on the capacity to extract spatial crossmodal invariants, …Read more
    This article is a summary of two chapters of a book published in French in 1997, entitled Comment L'esprit vient aux Bêtes, Paris, Gallimard. The core idea is that the crucial distinction between internal and external states, often used uncritically by theorists of intentionality, needs to be made on a non-circular basis. The proposal is that objectivity - the capacity to reidentify individuals as the same across places and times depends on the capacity to extract spatial crossmodal invariants, which in turn presupposes a capacity to (re)calibrate perceptual inputs across modalities in a principled way
    Animal Minds
  •  126
    Source unreliability decreases but does not cancel the impact of social information on metacognitive evaluations
    with Amélie Jacquot, Terry Eskenazi, Edith Sales-Wuillemin, Benoît Montalan, Julie Grèzes, and Laurence Conty
    Frontiers in Psychology 6. 2015.
    Philosophy of Cognitive Science
  •  121
    Le langage forme-t-il une condition nécessaire de la rationalité?
    Dialogue 46 (1): 165-172. 2007.
    A propos de 'Evolution et Rationalité' de Ronald de Sousa (2004)
  • Time and conscious experience
    In C.C. Gould (ed.), Artifacts, Representations, and Social Practice, Kluwer Academic Publishers. 1994.
    Neural Timing and ConsciousnessAspects of Consciousness
  •  53
    Intentionality, Consciousness and the System's Perspective
    In Denis Fisette (ed.), Consciousness and Intentionality: Models and Modalities of Attribution, Springer. pp. 51--72. 1999.
    Philosophy of ConsciousnessIntentionalityConsciousness and IntentionalityPhenomenal Intentionality
  •  41
    Ruth Barcan Marcus on Believing Without a Language
    In Michael Frauchiger (ed.), Modalities, Identity, Belief, and Moral Dilemmas, De Gruyter. pp. 111-128. 2015.
    Essentialism and Quantified Modal Logic
  • Espace et représentation
    Archives de Philosophie 58 (n/a): 563. 1995.
  •  99
    Précis of The Philosophy of Metacognition
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 89 (3): 703-709. 2014.
    Philosophy of Consciousness
  •  80
    Bolzano's theory of representation /La théorie de la représentation chez Bolzano
    Revue d'Histoire des Sciences 52 (3): 363-384. 1999.
  •  105
    Presentation
    Revue Internationale de Philosophie 1 (1): 5-6. 2008.
  •  11
    The representational basis of brute metacognition: a proposal
    In Robert W. Lurz (ed.), The Philosophy of Animal Minds, Cambridge University Press. pp. 165--183. 2009.
    Philosophy of Cognitive SciencePhilosophy of Psychology
  • Action
    In Barry Smith (ed.), John Searle, Cambridge University Press. pp. 102--127. 2003.
    Causal Theory of ActionThe Structure of ActionIntentional ActionIntentions, MiscTrying
  •  452
    Metacognition and metarepresentation: Is a self-directed theory of mind a precondition for metacognition? (review)
    Synthese 159 (2). 2007.
    Metacognition is often defined as thinking about thinking. It is exemplified in all the activities through which one tries to predict and evaluate one’s own mental dispositions, states and properties for their cognitive adequacy. This article discusses the view that metacognition has metarepresentational structure. Properties such as causal contiguity, epistemic transparency and procedural reflexivity are present in metacognition but missing in metarepresentation, while open-ended recursivity an…Read more
    Metacognition is often defined as thinking about thinking. It is exemplified in all the activities through which one tries to predict and evaluate one’s own mental dispositions, states and properties for their cognitive adequacy. This article discusses the view that metacognition has metarepresentational structure. Properties such as causal contiguity, epistemic transparency and procedural reflexivity are present in metacognition but missing in metarepresentation, while open-ended recursivity and inferential promiscuity only occur in metarepresentation. It is concluded that, although metarepresentations can redescribe metacognitive contents, metacognition and metarepresentation are functionally distinct
    The Theory TheoryMetacognition
  • Interpréter Diderot aujourd'hui, Colloque de Cerisy
    with E. de Fontenay
    Diderot Studies 23 204-206. 1988.
    Denis Diderot
  •  21
    La connaissance philosophique: essais sur l'œuvre de Gilles-Gaston Granger
    with Elisabeth Schwartz
    Presses Universitaires de France - PUF. 1995.
    Gilles Deleuze
  •  81
    Replies to Langland‐Hassan, Nagel, and Smith
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 89 (3): 736-755. 2014.
    Philosophy of Consciousness
  •  33
    Free Will : A Neurophilosophical Viewpoint
    Archives de Philosophie du Droit 55 79-95. 2012.
    Le déterminisme implique que le libre arbitre n’existe pas, que nous ne pouvons pas faire autrement ; réciproquement, avoir la possibilité de faire autrement implique que le déterminisme ne s’applique pas à l’instant, s’il existe, où on l’exerce. Cependant, la question de la responsabilité rend difficile d’accepter que les agents ne puissent pas faire autrement et motive fortement à rendre compatibles déterminisme et libre arbitre ou à soutenir, dans une veine « incompatibiliste », que le cervea…Read more
    Le déterminisme implique que le libre arbitre n’existe pas, que nous ne pouvons pas faire autrement ; réciproquement, avoir la possibilité de faire autrement implique que le déterminisme ne s’applique pas à l’instant, s’il existe, où on l’exerce. Cependant, la question de la responsabilité rend difficile d’accepter que les agents ne puissent pas faire autrement et motive fortement à rendre compatibles déterminisme et libre arbitre ou à soutenir, dans une veine « incompatibiliste », que le cerveau humain n’est pas soumis à la loi du déterminisme. Le libertarianisme, c’est-à-dire l’idée que, chez l’agent humain, il existe des exceptions au déterminisme causal lors de l’activité cérébrale, n’est pas défendable à la lumière des découvertes récentes sur la cognition humaine. Selon le compatibilisme, un agent n’ayant pas la possibilité de faire autrement jouit encore de son Libre Arbitre. La théorie de Harry Frankfurt d’une volonté à plusieurs niveaux est étudiée de manière critique. On présente la preuve neuroscientifique d’un modèle de volonté en cascade, dans l’esprit de Frankfurt. Ce modèle permet l’émergence d’une forme de comptabilisme dans lequel l’agent peut plus ou moins contrôler ce qu’elle fait, dépendre plus ou moins de son environnement et dispose donc plus ou moins de son libre arbitre
  •  159
    Questions of Form: Logic and Analytic Proposition from Kant to Carnap
    Univ Of Minnesota Press. 1989.
    _Questions of Form _was first published in 1989. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions. In _Questions on Form_, Joelle Proust traces the concept of the analytic proposition from Kant's development of the notion down to its place in the work of Rudolf Carnap, a founder of logical empiricism and a key figure in contemporary analytic philosophy. Usi…Read more
    _Questions of Form _was first published in 1989. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions. In _Questions on Form_, Joelle Proust traces the concept of the analytic proposition from Kant's development of the notion down to its place in the work of Rudolf Carnap, a founder of logical empiricism and a key figure in contemporary analytic philosophy. Using a method known in France as _topique comparative_,she provides a rigorous exposition of analyticity, situating it within four major philosophical systems—those of Kant, Bolzano, Frege, and Carnap—and clearly delineating its development from one system to the next. Proust takes as her point of departure Kant's distinction between analytic and synthetic judgments. Though she makes clear that Kant drew on Locke, Hume, and Leibniz, she argues that his notion of analyticity was innovative, not simply an elaboration of something already found in their work. She shows that the analytic proposition unexpectedly (given its modest status in Kant) came to play an important part in efforts to convert problems considered "transcendental" into questions of belonging to formal logic. Ultimately, her comparison of their systems reveals that the concept of the analytic, however specific its rile in each, remains linked to a foundationalist strategy—in effect, to the transcendentalist questions Kant used when he reinterpreted the findings of his empiricist predecessors. Hence, this book's provocative claim: today's so-called logical empiricism owes much more to Kant's notion of science than to Hume's.
    Kant: Philosophy of MathematicsKant: AnalyticityKant: ConceptsKant: Logical FormKant: Theoretical Ju…Read more
    Kant: Philosophy of MathematicsKant: AnalyticityKant: ConceptsKant: Logical FormKant: Theoretical Judgment
  •  27
    De la Nécessité d’un système de concepts. Quelques réflexions sur L'Aufbau der Welt de Rudolf Camap
    Philosophie Et Culture: Actes du XVIIe Congrès Mondial de Philosophie 2 930-935. 1988.
  •  49
    Précis de La nature de la volonté
    Philosophiques 35 (1): 109. 2008.
  • Animal learning
    Revue Internationale de Philosophie 46 (183): 418-434. 1992.
    Animal Cognition, Misc
  • Natural descriptors and externalism+ the definition of distality and externalist approach to intentionality
    Dialectica 48 (3): 249-265. 1994.
  •  1393
    Exploring the informational sources of metaperception: The case of Change Blindness Blindness
    with Anna Loussouarn and Damien Gabriel
    Consciousness and Cognition 20 (4): 1489-1501. 2011.
    Perceivers generally show a poor ability to detect changes, a condition referred to as “Change Blindness” . They are, in addition, “blind to their own blindness”. A common explanation of this “Change Blindness Blindness” is that it derives from an inadequate, “photographical” folk-theory about perception. This explanation, however, does not account for intra-individual variations of CBB across trials. Our study aims to explore an alternative theory, according to which participants base their sel…Read more
    Perceivers generally show a poor ability to detect changes, a condition referred to as “Change Blindness” . They are, in addition, “blind to their own blindness”. A common explanation of this “Change Blindness Blindness” is that it derives from an inadequate, “photographical” folk-theory about perception. This explanation, however, does not account for intra-individual variations of CBB across trials. Our study aims to explore an alternative theory, according to which participants base their self-evaluations on two activity-dependent cues, namely search time and perceived success in prior trials. These cues were found to influence self-evaluation in two orthogonal ways: success-feedback influenced self-evaluation in a global, contextual way, presumably by recalibrating the norm of adequacy for the task. Search time influenced it in a local way, predicting the success of a given trial from its duration
    Science of Visual ConsciousnessPsychologyChange/Inattentional Blindness
  •  47
    Le Matérialisme au conditionnel
    Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 85 (1). 1980.
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