•  132
    Robust Intelligibility: Response to Our Critics
    with Charles Spinosa
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 42 (2): 177-194. 1999.
    Robust realism is defended by developing further the account in Inquiry 42 (1999), pp. 49-78 of how human beings make things and people intelligible. Incommensurate worlds imply a violation of the principle of noncontradiction, but this violation does not have the consequences normally feared. Given our capacities to make things intelligible, some things, like human action, are most intelligible when they are understood as contradictory (e.g. free and determined). Things-in-themselves need not h…Read more
  •  261
    Anonymity versus commitment: The dangers of education on the internet (review)
    Educational Philosophy and Theory 34 (4). 2002.
    I shall translate Kierkegaard's account of the dangers and opportunities of what he called the Press into a critique of the Internet so as to raise the question: what contribution -- for good or ill -- can the World Wide Web, with its ability to deliver vast amounts of information to users all over the world, make to educators trying to pass on knowledge and to develop skills and wisdom in their students? I will then use Kierkegaard's three-stage answer to the problem of lack of involvement pose…Read more
  •  3
    What is Maturity? Foucault and Habermas on “What is Enlightenment?”
    In Michel Foucault & David Couzens Hoy (eds.), Foucault: a critical reader, Blackwell. pp. 109--21. 1986.
  •  221
    Holism and Hermeneutics
    Review of Metaphysics 34 (1): 3-23. 1980.
    OF THE many issues surrounding the new interest in hermeneutics, current debate has converged upon two.
  •  126
    On the proper treatment of Smolensky
    with Stuart E. Dreyfus
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 11 (1): 31-32. 1988.
  •  235
    Existential Phenomenology and the Brave New World of The Matrix
    The Harvard Review of Philosophy 11 (1): 18-31. 2003.
    The Matrix raises several familiar philosophical problems in such new ways that students all over the country are assigning it to their philosophy professors. In so doing, they have offered us a great opportunity to illustrate some of the basic insights of existential phenomenology. The Matrix might seem to renew Descartes’s worry that, since all we ever experience are our own inner mental states, we might, for all we could tell, be living in an illusion created by a malicious demon. In that cas…Read more
  •  121
    What artificial experts can and cannot do
    with Stuart E. Dreyfus
    AI and Society 6 (1): 18-26. 1991.
    One's model of skill determines what one expects from neural network modelling and how one proposes to go about enhancing expertise. We view skill acquisition as a progression from acting on the basis of a rough theory of a domain in terms of facts and rules to being able to respond appropriately to the current situation on the basis of neuron connections changed by the results of responses to the relevant aspects of many past situations. Viewing skill acquisition in this ways suggests how one c…Read more
  • The computer as a mistaken model of the mind
    with John Haugeland
    In Hubert L. Dreyfus & John Haugeland (eds.), Philosophy Of Psychology, Macmillan. 1974.
  •  163
    Ways of the Hand: A Rewritten Account
    with David Sudnow
    MIT Press. 2001.
    Ways of the Hand tells the story of how David Sudnow learned to improvise jazz on the piano. Because he had been trained as an ethnographer and social psychologist, Sudnow was attentive to what he experienced in ways that other novice pianists are not. The result, first published in 1978 and now considered by many to be a classic, was arguably the finest and most detailed account of skill development ever published.Looking back after more than twenty years, Sudnow was struck by the extent to whi…Read more
  •  37
    Inadequacies in the decision analysis model of rationality
    with Stuart E. Dreyfus
    In A. Hooker, J. J. Leach & E. F. McClennen (eds.), Foundations and Applications of Decision Theory: Vol.II: Epistemic and Social Applications, D. Reidel. pp. 115--124. 1978.
  •  5
    Superando el mito de lo mental: lo que la fenomenología de la pericia cotidiana puede aportar a los filósofos
    In David Pérez Chico, Rodríguez Suárez & Luisa Paz (eds.), Explicar y comprender, Plaza Y Valdés. pp. 199--230. 2011.
  •  521
    Being and power: Heidegger and Foucault
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 4 (1). 1996.
    being, culminating in the technological understanding of being, in order to help us understand and overcome our current way of dealing with things as objects and resources, Foucault analyzes several regimes of power, culminating in modern bio-power, in order to help us free ourselves from understanding ourselves as subjects.
  •  300
    A Merleau-Pontyian Critique of Husserl’s and Searle’s Representationalist Accounts of Action
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 100 (3): 287-302. 2000.
    Husserl and Searle agree that, for a bodily movement to be an action, it must be caused by a propositional representation. Husserl's representation is a mental state whose intentional content is what the agent is trying to do; Searle thinks of the representation as a logical structure expressing the action's conditions of satisfaction. Merleau-Ponty criticises both views by introducing a kind of activity he calls motor intentionality, in which the agent, rather than aiming at success, feels draw…Read more
  •  9
    Heidegger's history of the being of equipment
    In Hubert L. Dreyfuss & Harrison Hall (eds.), Heidegger: a critical reader, Blackwell. pp. 173--185. 1992.
  •  73
    Putting Computers in Their Place
    with Stuart Dreyfus
    Social Research: An International Quarterly 53. 1986.
  •  110
    Home Courses Selected Papers Selected Books C.V. Dreydegger.org Phil. Faculty Dept. Philosophy UC Berkeley.
  •  476
    A Critique of Artificial Reason Hubert L. Dreyfus. HUBERT L. DREYFUS What Computers Still Can't Do Thi s One XZKQ-GSY-8KDG What. WHAT COMPUTERS STILL CAN'T DO Front Cover.
  •  397
    Actual AI research began auspiciously around 1955 with Allen Newell and Herbert Simon's work at the RAND Corporation. Newell and Simon proved that computers could do more than calculate. They demonstrated that computers were physical symbol systems whose symbols could be made to stand for anything, including features of the real world, and whose programs could be used as rules for relating these features. In this way computers could be used to simulate certain important aspects intelligence. Thu…Read more
  •  712
    Overcoming the Myth of the Mental: How Philosophers Can Profit from the Phenomenology of Everyday Expertise
    Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 79 (2): 47-65. 2005.
    Back in 1950, while a physics major at Harvard, I wandered into C.I. Lewis’s epistemology course. There, Lewis was confidently expounding the need for an indubitable Given to ground knowledge, and he was explaining where that ground was to be found. I was so impressed that I immediately switched majors from ungrounded physics to grounded philosophy.
  •  166
    A Companion to Phenomenology and Existentialism (edited book)
    Wiley-Blackwell. 2009.
    _A Companion to Phenomenology and Existentialism_ is a complete guide to two of the dominant movements of philosophy in the twentieth century. Written by a team of leading scholars, including Dagfinn Føllesdal, J. N. Mohanty, Robert Solomon, Jean-Luc Marion Highlights the area of overlap between the two movements Features longer essays discussing each of the main schools of thought, shorter essays introducing prominent themes, and problem-oriented chapters Organised topically, around concepts su…Read more
  •  3
    Merleau-Ponty and recent cognitive science
    In Taylor Carman & Mark B. N. Hansen (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Merleau-Ponty, Cambridge University Press. pp. 132. 2004.
  •  257
    Samuel Todes’s book, Body and World, makes an important contribution to the current debate among analytic philosophers concerning non–conceptual intentional content and its relation to thought. Todes’s relevant theses are: (1) Our unified, active body, in moving to meet our needs, generates a unified, spatio–temporal field. (2) In that field we use our perceptual skills to make the determinable perceptual objects that show up relatively determinate. (3) Once we have made the objects of practical…Read more