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Dave Beisecker

University of Nevada, Las Vegas
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    47
    • Most Recent
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  •  Events
    1
  •  News and Updates
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 More details
  • University of Nevada, Las Vegas
    Department of Philosophy
    Regular Faculty
Paradise, Nevada, United States of America
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Language
Logic and Philosophy of Logic
Philosophy of the Americas
  • All publications (47)
  •  26
    Impressions, and the logic of 'what it's like'
    Consciousness and Emotion: Agency, Conscious Choice, and Selective Perception 1 137. 2005.
    Hume: Metaphysics and Epistemology
  •  490
    Phenomenal consciousness, sense impressions, and the logic of 'what it's like
    In Ralph D. Ellis & Natika Newton (eds.), Consciousness and Emotion: Agency, Conscious Choice, and Selective Perception, John Benjamins. 2005.
    What is it Like?
  •  81
    “From the Grunts and Groans of the Cave….” Presidential Address
    Southwest Philosophy Review 29 (1): 1-11. 2013.
  •  155
    Some more thoughts about thought and talk: Davidson and fellows on animal belief
    Philosophy 77 (1): 115-124. 2002.
    Donald Davidson's argument that non-linguistic creatures lack beliefs rests on two premises: (1) to be a believer, one must have the concept of belief, and (2) to have the concept of belief, one must interpret the utterances of others. However, Davidson's defense of these premises is overly compressed and unconvincing. In a recent issue of Philosophy, Roger Fellows provides new arguments for these premises. In this paper, I explain why I'm not persuaded by Fellows' attempt to bolster Davidson's …Read more
    Donald Davidson's argument that non-linguistic creatures lack beliefs rests on two premises: (1) to be a believer, one must have the concept of belief, and (2) to have the concept of belief, one must interpret the utterances of others. However, Davidson's defense of these premises is overly compressed and unconvincing. In a recent issue of Philosophy, Roger Fellows provides new arguments for these premises. In this paper, I explain why I'm not persuaded by Fellows' attempt to bolster Davidson's line of reasoning and cast doubt on Davidson's and Fellows' overall strategy of attaching special significance to the concept of belief.
    Donald Davidson
  •  211
    Dennett’s Overlooked Originality
    Minds and Machines 16 (1): 43-55. 2006.
    No philosopher has worked harder than Dan Dennett to set the possibility of machine mentality on firm philosophical footing. Dennett’s defense of this possibility has both a positive and a negative thrust. On the positive side, he has developed an account of mental activity that is tailor-made for the attribution of intentional states to purely mechanical contrivances, while on the negative side, he pillories as mystery mongering and skyhook grasping any attempts to erect barriers to the concept…Read more
    No philosopher has worked harder than Dan Dennett to set the possibility of machine mentality on firm philosophical footing. Dennett’s defense of this possibility has both a positive and a negative thrust. On the positive side, he has developed an account of mental activity that is tailor-made for the attribution of intentional states to purely mechanical contrivances, while on the negative side, he pillories as mystery mongering and skyhook grasping any attempts to erect barriers to the conception of machine mentality by excavating gulfs to keep us “bona fide” thinkers apart from the rest of creation. While I think he’s “won” the rhetorical tilts with his philosophical adversaries, I worry that Dennett’s negative side sometimes gets the better of him, and that this obscures advances that can be made on the positive side of his program. In this paper, I show that Dennett is much too dismissive of original intentionality in particular, and that this notion can be put to good theoretical use after all. Though deployed to distinguish different grades of mentality, it can (and should) be incorporated into a philosophical account of the mind that is recognizably Dennettian in spirit.
    Artificial Minds, Misc
  •  107
    Zombies and the Phenomenal Concept Strategy
    Southwest Philosophy Review 25 (1): 207-216. 2009.
    Phenomenal Concepts
  •  57
    Extending Triangulation
    Southwest Philosophy Review 22 (2): 87-90. 2006.
    Donald Davidson
  •  53
    On the Construction of Heavenly Bodies: Comments on Justin Remhof’s “Object Constructivism and Unconstructed Objects”
    Southwest Philosophy Review 30 (2): 45-49. 2014.
  •  58
    Corporations Behaving Badly
    Southwest Philosophy Review 26 (2): 17-21. 2010.
    Ethics
  •  158
    Zombies, Phenomenal Concepts, and the Paradox of Phenomenal Judgment
    Journal of Consciousness Studies 17 (3-4): 3-4. 2010.
    This paper explores the viability of rejecting a largely unchallenged third premise of the conceivability argument against materialism. Fittingly labeled 'type-Z', this reply essentially grants to the zombie lover, not just the possibility of zombies, but also their actuality. We turn out to be the very creatures Chalmers has taken such great pains to conceive and more conventional materialists have tried to wipe off the face of the planet. So consciousness is a wholly material affair. What is c…Read more
    This paper explores the viability of rejecting a largely unchallenged third premise of the conceivability argument against materialism. Fittingly labeled 'type-Z', this reply essentially grants to the zombie lover, not just the possibility of zombies, but also their actuality. We turn out to be the very creatures Chalmers has taken such great pains to conceive and more conventional materialists have tried to wipe off the face of the planet. So consciousness is a wholly material affair. What is conceivable but non-actual are not zombies, but rather 'angelic' beings possessing an acquaintance with supermaterial phenomenal states. After showing how Chalmers' recent discussion of the phenomenal concepts strategy should incline those pursuing such a strategy toward a type-Z response, this paper relates type- Z materialism to similar replies that Chalmers has found 'hard to classify' and closes with a brief remark about how a type-Z materialist might reply to the knowledge argument.
    Phenomenal Concepts
  •  40
    John & Susan & Bill & Smith
    Southwest Philosophy Review 32 (2): 35-38. 2016.
  •  58
    Review of Andrew Brook, Don Ross (eds.), Daniel Dennett (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2002 (11). 2002.
    Philosophy of Mind, General Works
  •  62
    Excessively Fluid?
    Southwest Philosophy Review 23 (2): 27-31. 2007.
    Philosophy of Psychology
  •  8
    Normative Functionalism and its Pragmatist Roots
    Normative Funcitonalism and the Pittsburgh School. 2012.
    I shall characterize normative functionalism and contrast it with its causal counterpart. After tracing both stripes of functionalism to the work of the classical American pragmatists, I then argue that they are not exclusive alternatives. Instead, both might be required for an appropriately illuminating account of human rational activity.
    American Pragmatism, Misc19th Century American Pragmatism, MiscWilfrid SellarsNormativity of Meaning…Read more
    American Pragmatism, Misc19th Century American Pragmatism, MiscWilfrid SellarsNormativity of Meaning and Content
  •  123
    The Force and Content of the Geach-Frege Problem
    Southwest Philosophy Review 27 (2): 93-97. 2011.
    Moral Expressivism
  •  113
    Resolving A Few Conflicts in Evolutionary Psychology with Cognitive Fluidity
    Southwest Philosophy Review 23 (1): 105-115. 2007.
    Evolutionary Psychology
  •  50
    Of Demands and Desires for Picon Punch: Commentary on Avery Archer’s “What is Direction of Fit?”
    Southwest Philosophy Review 31 (2): 75-80. 2015.
    Practical and Theoretical ReasoningPratical Reason, Misc
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