•  95
    What is distinctive about my views in epistemology? One thing is that my concern with epistemology is a concern with methodology. Furthermore, I reject psychologism about logic and reject the idea that deductive rules like modus ponens are in any way rules of inference. I accept a kind of methodological conservatism and reject methodological theories that appeal to special foundations, analytic truth, or a priori justification. Although I believe that there are significant practical aspects of t…Read more
  • Troubles with Flourishing: Comments on David Norton
    Reason Papers 11 69-71. 1986.
  •  44
    In (Harman 2007) I argued “that a purely objective account of conscious experience cannot always by itself give an understanding of what it is like to have that experience.” Following Nagel (1974), I suggested that such a gap “has no obvious metaphysical implications. It [merely] reflects the distinction between two kinds of understanding,” objective and subjective, where subjective understanding or “Das Verstehen” (Dilthey 1883/1989) of another creature’s experience involves knowing what it is …Read more
  •  1
    Problems with Probabilistic Semantics
    In Alex Orenstein & Rafael Stern (eds.), Developments in Semantics, Haven. pp. 243-237. 1983.
  • Category mistakes in metaphysics and epistemology
    In James Tomberlin (ed.), Language and Mind, Blackwell. 2003.
  •  439
    The Problem of Induction
    with Sanjeev R. Kulkarni
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 72 (3): 559-575. 2006.
    The problem of induction is sometimes motivated via a comparison between rules of induction and rules of deduction. Valid deductive rules are necessarily truth preserving, while inductive rules are not.
  • Philosophy: Beliefs, Attitudes, and Justification (review)
    Reason Papers 8 59-70. 1982.
  •  527
    Change in View offers an entirely original approach to the philosophical study of reasoning by identifying principles of reasoning with principles for revising one's beliefs and intentions and not with principles of logic. This crucial observation leads to a number of important and interesting consequences that impinge on psychology and artificial intelligence as well as on various branches of philosophy, from epistemology to ethics and action theory. Gilbert Harman is Professor of Philosophy at…Read more
  •  79
    Intentionality: Some distinctions
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 13 (4): 607-608. 1990.
  •  110
    For philosophical naturalism, as I understand it, philosophy is continuous with natural science. It takes the methods of philosophy to be continuous with those of the natural sciences and is sceptical of allegedly apriori intuitions which it claims need to be tested against one’s other beliefs and, ideally, against the world.
  •  77
  •  655
    Skepticism about Character Traits
    The Journal of Ethics 13 (2-3). 2009.
    The first part of this article discusses recent skepticism about character traits. The second describes various forms of virtue ethics as reactions to such skepticism. The philosopher J.-P. Sartre argued in the 1940s that character traits are pretenses, a view that the sociologist E. Goffman elaborated in the 1950s. Since then social psychologists have shown that attributions of character traits tend to be inaccurate through the ignoring of situational factors. (Personality psychology has tended…Read more
  •  145
    Conceptions of the human mind: essays in honor of George A. Miller (edited book)
    with George Armitage Miller
    L. Erlbaum Associates. 1993.
    This volume is a direct result of a conference held at Princeton University to honor George A. Miller, an extraordinary psychologist. A distinguished panel of speakers from various disciplines -- psychology, philosophy, neuroscience and artificial intelligence -- were challenged to respond to Dr. Miller's query: "What has happened to cognition? In other words, what has the past 30 years contributed to our understanding of the mind? Do we really know anything that wasn't already clear to William …Read more