Mark Risjord

Emory University
University Of Hradec Kralove
  •  44
    Meaning, belief, and language acquisition
    Philosophical Psychology 9 (4): 465-475. 1996.
    A very plausible and common view of meaning supposes that linguistic meaning is to be understood in terms of speakers' intentions. This program proposes to analyse the meaning of a sentence in terms of what speakers mean by or in uttering it; and this speaker meaning in turn is to be analysed in terms of the speaker's intentions. This essay argues that intention-based semantics cannot provide an adequate analysis of linguistic meaning: not because of contrived counterexamples, nor because it con…Read more
  •  264
    Scientific change as political action: Franz Boas and the anthropology of race
    Philosophy of the Social Sciences 37 (1): 24-45. 2007.
    A theory is value-neutral when no constitutive values are part of its content. Nonneutral theories seem to lack objectivity because it is not clear how the constitutive values could be empirically confirmed. This article analyzes Franz Boas’s famous arguments against nineteenth-century evolutionary anthropology and racial theory. While he recognized that talk of "higher civilizations" encoded a constitutive, political value with consequences for slavery and colonialism, he argued against it on e…Read more
  •  280
    The final chapter of the book 'redraws the map', to create a new picture of nursing science based on the following principles: Problems of practice should guide ...
  •  29
    Metaphysics, method, and the exact sciences
    Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 24 (3): 493-499. 1993.
  •  3873
    The Philosophy of Social Science: A Contemporary Introduction examines the perennial questions of philosophy by engaging with the empirical study of society. The book offers a comprehensive overview of debates in the field, with special attention to questions arising from new research programs in the social sciences. The text uses detailed examples of social scientific research to motivate and illustrate the philosophical discussion. Topics include the relationship of social policy to social sci…Read more
  •  19
    Nursing and human freedom
    Nursing Philosophy 15 (1): 35-45. 2014.
    Debates over how to conceptualize the nursing role were prominent in the nursing literature during the latter part of the twentieth century. There were, broadly, two schools of thought. Writers like Henderson and Orem used the idea of a self‐care deficit to understand the nurse as doing for the patient what he or she could not do alone. Later writers found this paternalistic and emphasized the importance of the patient's free will. This essay uses the ideas of positive and negative freedom to ex…Read more
  •  312
    Evolution and the Kantian Worldview
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 44 (S1): 72-84. 2006.
    Nonhuman animals seem to make inferences and have mental representations. Brandom articulates a Kantian (and Hegelian) account of representation that seems to make nonhuman mental content impossible: animals are merely sentient, not sapient. His position is problematic because it makes it impossible to understand how our cognitive capacities evolved. This essay discusses experimental and ethological work on transitive inference. It argues that to fit such evidence within the Kantian framework, t…Read more
  •  1
    Ethnography and Culture
    In Stephen Turner, Mark Risjord, John Woods & Paul Thagard (eds.), Handbook of Philosophy of Anthropology and Sociology, Elsevier. 2007.
  •  225
    The limits of cognitive theory in anthropology
    Philosophical Explorations 7 (3). 2004.
    The cognitive revolution in psychology was a significant advance in our thinking about the mind. Philosophers and social scientists have looked to the cognitive sciences with the hope that the social world will yield to similar explanatory strategies. Dan Sperber has argued for a programme that would conceptualize the entire domain of anthropological theory in cognitive terms. Sperber's 'epidemiology' specifically excludes interpretive, structuralist and functionalist theories. This essay evalua…Read more
  •  23
    Models of culture
    In Harold Kincaid (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Social Science, Oxford University Press. pp. 387. 2012.
  •  73
    Is there such a thing as a language?
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 22 (2): 163-190. 1992.
    ‘There is no such thing as a language,’ Donald Davidson tells us. Though this is a startling claim in its own right, it seems especially puzzling coming from a leading theorizer about language. Over the years, Davidson’s important essays have sparked the hope that there is a route to a positive, nonskeptical theory of meaning for natural languages. This hope would seem to be dashed if there are no natural languages. Unless Davidson’s radical claim is a departure from his developed views, the Dav…Read more
  •  37
    Uncovers the methodological principles that govern interpretive change
  •  19
    Relativism and the Possibility of Criticism
    Cogito 12 (2): 155-160. 1998.
  •  20
    Naturalism and Normativity. Columbia Themes in Philosophy
    Nursing Philosophy 13 (3): 230-231. 2012.