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Gilbert Harman

Princeton University
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    256
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  •  Events
    3
  •  News and Updates
    20

 More details
  • Princeton University
    Department of Philosophy
    Unknown
Princeton, New Jersey, United States of America
  • All publications (256)
  •  172
    What is cognitive access?
    Block is concerned with the question whether there are cases of phenomenology in the absence of cognitive access. I assume that, more precisely, the question is whether there are cases in which a subject S has a phenomenological experience E to which S does not have direct cognitive access?
    The Concept of ConsciousnessAspects of Consciousness
  •  131
    Positive versus negative undermining in belief revision
    Noûs 18 (1): 39-49. 1984.
    Belief Revision
  •  175
    Category mistakes in m&e
    Philosophical Perspectives 17 (1). 2003.
    Theories of causation may imply that your birth causes your death, which seems odd in the way that it is not odd to say that your birth precedes your death. Theories of knowledge may imply that the object of knowledge is the same as the object of belief, although we know but do not believe facts and we can know a proposition without knowing whether it is true
  •  434
    The Nonexistence of Character Traits
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 100 (2): 223-226. 2000.
    Objections to Virtue EthicsSkepticism about Character
  •  89
    Knowledge and the relativity of information
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 6 (1): 72-72. 1983.
  •  132
    Brainstorms: Philosophical Essays on Mind and Psychology
    with Daniel C. Dennett
    Philosophical Review 89 (1): 115. 1980.
    Philosophy of Mind
  •  223
    Self-reflexive thoughts
    Philosophical Issues 16 (1): 334-345. 2006.
    Alice has insomnia. She has trouble falling asleep and part of the problem is that she worries about it and realizes that her worrying about it tends to keep from falling asleep. It occurs to her that thinking that she will not be able to fall asleep may be a kind of self-fulfilling prophecy. Perhaps she even has a thought that might be expressed like this: I am not going to fall asleep because of my having this very thought. This thought attributes to itself the property of keeping her awake
    First-Person ContentsSelf-Representational Theories of Consciousness
  •  59
    Internally represented grammars
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 6 (3): 408. 1983.
    Philosophy of Cognitive SciencePhilosophy of Linguistics
  •  1
    Pragmatism and reasons for belief
    In Christopher B. Kulp (ed.), Realism/Antirealism and Epistemology, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 1997.
    Ethics of Belief
  •  127
    Reasoning and Evidence One Does Not Possess1
    Midwest Studies in Philosophy 5 (1): 163-182. 1980.
    Evidence, Misc
  •  20
    Response to Shaffer, Thagard, Strevens and Hanson
    with Sanjeev Kulkarni
    Abstracta 5 (S3): 47-56. 2009.
    Like Glenn Shafer, we are nostalgic for the time when “philosophers, mathematicians, and scientists interested in probability, induction, and scientific methodology talked with each other more than they do now”, [p.10]. 1 Shafer goes on to mention other relevant contemporary communities. He himself has been at the interface of many of these communities while at the same time making major contributions to them and this very symposium represents something of that desired discussion. We begin with …Read more
    Like Glenn Shafer, we are nostalgic for the time when “philosophers, mathematicians, and scientists interested in probability, induction, and scientific methodology talked with each other more than they do now”, [p.10]. 1 Shafer goes on to mention other relevant contemporary communities. He himself has been at the interface of many of these communities while at the same time making major contributions to them and this very symposium represents something of that desired discussion. We begin with a couple of general points about issues several commentators have raised and then discuss other more particular issues
    Probabilistic FrameworksInductive LogicMachine LearningPhilosophy of StatisticsApplications of Proba…Read more
    Probabilistic FrameworksInductive LogicMachine LearningPhilosophy of StatisticsApplications of Probability, Misc
  •  241
    Guilt-free morality
    Oxford Studies in Metaethics 4 203-14. 2009.
    Here are some of the ways in which some philosophers and psychologists have taken the emotion of guilt to be essential to morality. One relatively central idea is that guilt feelings are warranted if an agent knows that he or she has acted morally wrongly. It might be said that in such a case the agent has a strong reason to feel guilt, that the agent ought to have guilt feelings, that the agent is justified in having guilt feelings and unjustified in not having guilt feelings. It might be said …Read more
    Here are some of the ways in which some philosophers and psychologists have taken the emotion of guilt to be essential to morality. One relatively central idea is that guilt feelings are warranted if an agent knows that he or she has acted morally wrongly. It might be said that in such a case the agent has a strong reason to feel guilt, that the agent ought to have guilt feelings, that the agent is justified in having guilt feelings and unjustified in not having guilt feelings. It might be said that it would be immoral of an agent not to have feelings of guilt after realizing that he or she has acted morally wrongly or that only an agent with bad character would not have such feelings
    Guilt and Shame
  •  1
    Character
    with W. Merritt Maria and M. Doris John
    In John Doris (ed.), Moral Psychology Handbook, Oxford University Press. pp. 355--401. 2010.
    Skepticism about CharacterMoral Character, Misc
  •  62
    New Horizons in the Study of Language and Mind (review)
    Journal of Philosophy 98 (5): 265-269. 2001.
  •  37
    27. Reflections on Language, by Noam Chomsky; On Noam Chomsky: Critical Essays
    In Bernard Williams (ed.), Essays and Reviews: 1959-2002, Princeton University Press. pp. 133-140. 2014.
    Philosophy of Linguistics, Miscellaneous
  •  228
    Epistemic Contextualism as a Theory of Primary Speaker Meaning1
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 75 (1): 173-179. 2007.
    Jason Stanley’s Knowledge and Practical Interests is a brilliant book, combining insights about knowledge with a careful examination of how recent views in epistemology fit with the best of recent linguistic semantics. Although I am largely convinced by Stanley’s objections to epistemic contextualism, I will try in what follows to formulate a version that might have some prospect of escaping his powerful critique.
    Epistemic Contextualism and Invariantism
  • Wide functionalism
    In Stephen R. Schiffer & Susan Steele (eds.), Cognition and Representation, Westview Press. pp. 11--20. 1988.
    FunctionalismTwin Earth and Externalism
  •  4422
    Moral Philosophy Meets Social Psychology: Virtue Ethics and the Fundamental Attribution Error
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 99 (1999): 315-331. 1999.
    Ordinary moral thought often commits what social psychologists call 'the fundamental attribution error '. This is the error of ignoring situational factors and overconfidently assuming that distinctive behaviour or patterns of behaviour are due to an agent's distinctive character traits. In fact, there is no evidence that people have character traits in the relevant sense. Since attribution of character traits leads to much evil, we should try to educate ourselves and others to stop doing it.
    Skepticism about CharacterMoral Reasoning and Motivation, MiscMoral EducationPsychology of EthicsEth…Read more
    Skepticism about CharacterMoral Reasoning and Motivation, MiscMoral EducationPsychology of EthicsEthics and Cognitive Science, MiscTopics in Virtue Ethics, MiscMoral Character, MiscMoral Psychology, MiscApplicability of Virtue EthicsObjections to Virtue Ethics, Misc
  •  3
    Rationality
    In E. E. Smith & D. N. Osherson (eds.), Invitation to Cognitive Science, Mit Press. 1995.
    Rationality
  •  100
    Can science understand the mind?
    In George Armitage Miller & Gilbert Harman (eds.), Conceptions of the human mind: essays in honor of George A. Miller, L. Erlbaum Associates. pp. 111--121. 1993.
    The Knowledge Argument
  •  29
    The Simplest Hypothesis
    Critica 20 (59): 23-42. 1988.
  •  63
    La valeur intrinsèque
    with Gilbert Calhoun and Laurie Calhoun
    Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 99 (2). 1994.
  • Change in View: Principles of Reasoning
    Studia Logica 48 (2): 260-261. 1986.
    Logic and Philosophy of Logic
  •  208
    The Future of the A Priori
    Journal of Philosophical Research 28 (9999): 23-34. 2003.
    Two conceptions of a priori methods and assumptions can be distinguished. First, there are the assumptions and methods accepted prior to a given inquiry. Second, there are innate assumptions and methods. For each of these two types of a priori methods and assumptions, we can also allow cases in which one starts with something that is a priori and is justified in reaching a new belief or procedure without making any appeal to new experiential data. But we should not suppose there is some further …Read more
    Two conceptions of a priori methods and assumptions can be distinguished. First, there are the assumptions and methods accepted prior to a given inquiry. Second, there are innate assumptions and methods. For each of these two types of a priori methods and assumptions, we can also allow cases in which one starts with something that is a priori and is justified in reaching a new belief or procedure without making any appeal to new experiential data. But we should not suppose there is some further sort of a priori explained in terms of some other notion of justification. If we try to construct a notion of the a priori by considering ways in which knowledge, belief, or reasoning might be though to be directly a priori, via direct insight, inability to imagine something false, intentions about use of language, and the language faculty, the resulting conception of the a prior in each of these cases reduces to either of the first two conceptions.
    The A PrioriTheories of the A Priori
  •  168
    Justice and Moral Bargaining
    Social Philosophy and Policy 1 (1): 114. 1983.
    INTRODUCTION In my view, justice is entirely conventional; indeed, all of morality consists in conventions that are the result of continual tacit bargaining and adjustment. This is not to say social arrangements are just whenever they are in accordance with the principles of justice accepted in that society. We can use our own principles of justice in judging the institutions of another society, and we can appeal to some principles we accept in order to criticize other principles we accept. To u…Read more
    INTRODUCTION In my view, justice is entirely conventional; indeed, all of morality consists in conventions that are the result of continual tacit bargaining and adjustment. This is not to say social arrangements are just whenever they are in accordance with the principles of justice accepted in that society. We can use our own principles of justice in judging the institutions of another society, and we can appeal to some principles we accept in order to criticize other principles we accept. To use David Hume's model of the relevant sort of convention, two people rowing a boat each continually adjusts his or her rate of rowing to the other so that they come to row at the same rate, a rate that is normally somewhere between the rate at which each would prefer to row. In the same way the basic principles of justice accepted by people of different powers and resources are the result of a continually changing compromise affecting such things as the relative importance attached to helping others as compared with the importance attached to not harming others. Hume's rowers provide an example of a “convention” that is normally completely tacit. There are other models in which the bargaining can be more explicit, for example when a seller comes to set prices that are acceptable to customers, when employers reach understandings with employees concerning wages, or when political groups influence legislation. I want eventually to consider the implications for moral reasoning and argument of the thesis that principles of justice are entirely the result of implicit bargaining and convention of this sort.
    JusticeDistributive Justice
  •  15
    Philosophy of language
    In Gerhard Preyer (ed.), Donald Davidson on truth, meaning, and the mental, Oxford University Press. pp. 39. 2012.
  •  284
    Analyticity regained?
    Noûs 30 (3): 392-400. 1996.
    The Analytic-Synthetic Distinction
  •  3
    Selections from Thought
    In Tim Crane & Katalin Farkas (eds.), Metaphysics: a guide and anthology, Oxford University Press. 2004.
  • Immanent and transcendent approaches to the theory of meaning
    In Robert B. Barrett & Roger F. Gibson (eds.), Perspectives on Quine, Blackwell. 1990.
    Inferentialist Accounts of Meaning and ContentInferential Theories of Concepts
  •  46
    Preface
    In Thought, Princeton University Press. 1973.
    British Philosophy
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