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Robert Brandom

University of Pittsburgh
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    180
    • Most Recent
    • Most Downloaded
    • Topics
  •  Events
    24
  •  News and Updates
    34

 More details
  • University of Pittsburgh
    Department of Philosophy
    Regular Faculty
Princeton University
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1977
CV
Areas of Specialization
Logic and Philosophy of Logic
Philosophy of Language
19th Century Philosophy
20th Century Philosophy
Philosophy of Mind
Philosophy of Action
1 more
Areas of Interest
19th Century Philosophy
20th Century Philosophy
Logic and Philosophy of Logic
Philosophy of Language
Philosophy of Mind
Philosophy of Action
1 more
  • All publications (180)
  •  60
    Metaphilosophical Reflections on the Idea of Metaphysics
    Philosophia 40 (1): 13-26. 2012.
  •  77
    Kantian Lessons about Mind, Meaning, and Rationality
    Philosophical Topics 34 (1): 1-20. 2006.
    Mental States and Processes
  •  766
    Kantian Lessons about Mind, Meaning, and Rationality
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 44 (S1): 49-71. 2005.
    Kant’s innovative normative characterization of what one is doing in judging is appealed to as the basis of a story about how he moves from an inferential to a representational characterization of the contents of judgment. His normative notion of freedom and his demarcation of the normative in terms of autonomy are connected to his account of the status of modal concepts.
    RationalityAutonomy and Moral Psychology
  •  30
    Kantian Lessons about Mind, Meaning, and Rationality
    Modern Schoolman 84 (2): 109-129. 2006.
  •  532
    Inferentialism and Some of Its Challenges
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 74 (3): 651-676. 2007.
    Inferentialist Accounts of Meaning and Content
  • Inferentialism (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2000), 230 pp (review)
    Croatian Journal of Philosophy 1 (1-3): 363. 2001.
  •  165
    Inference, expression, and induction
    Philosophical Studies 54 (2): 257-285. 1988.
    Inductive Reasoning
  •  1
    Interview
    Epistemologia 22 (1): 143-150. 1999.
    Science, Logic, and MathematicsPhilosophy of Psychology
  •  573
    Heidegger’s Categories in Being and Time
    The Monist 66 (3): 387-409. 1983.
    In Division One of Being and Time Heidegger presents a novel categorization of what there is, and an original account of the project of ontology and consequently of the nature and genesis of those ontological categories. He officially recognizes two categories of Being: Zuhandensein and Vorhandensein. Vorhandene things are roughly the objective, person-independent, causally interacting subjects of natural scientific inquiry. Zuhandene things are those which a neo-Kantian would describe as having…Read more
    In Division One of Being and Time Heidegger presents a novel categorization of what there is, and an original account of the project of ontology and consequently of the nature and genesis of those ontological categories. He officially recognizes two categories of Being: Zuhandensein and Vorhandensein. Vorhandene things are roughly the objective, person-independent, causally interacting subjects of natural scientific inquiry. Zuhandene things are those which a neo-Kantian would describe as having been imbued with human values and significances. In addition to these categories, there is human Being, or Dasein, in whose structure the origins of the two thing-ish categories are to be found. This essay concerns itself with three of Heidegger’s conceptual innovations: his conceiving of ontology in terms of self-adjudicating anthropological categories, as summed up in the slogan that “fundamental ontology is the regional ontology of Dasein,” his corresponding anti-traditional assertion of the ontological priority of the domain of the Zuhandensein to that of the Vorhandensein, which latter is seen as rooted in or precipitated out of that more basic world of human significances, and the non-Cartesian account of awareness and classificatory consciousness as social and practical.
    Martin Heidegger
  •  52
    Heideggers Kategorien in „Sein und Zeit“
    Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 45 (4): 531-550. 1997.
  •  2
    From Truth to Semantics:: A Path through «Making It Explicit»
    Analytica 5 111-127. 2011.
    Russian translation of Brandom R. From Truth to Semantics: A Path through «Making It Explicit» // Philosophical Issues. – 1997. – Vol. 8. Translated by Inna Byshevskaya and Renata Sukhorukova.
  •  437
    Facts, norms, and normative facts: A reply to Habermas
    European Journal of Philosophy 8 (3). 2000.
    Facts and States of AffairsJürgen Habermas
  •  47
    Esquisse d'un programme pour une lecture critique de Hegel comparer les concepts empiriques et les concepts logiques
    Philosophie 99 (4): 63-95. 2008.
  •  28
    Ently you don't realize that Disney has been testing their animatronic vultures
    In Bernd Prien & David P. Schweikard (eds.), Robert Brandom: Analytic Pragmatist, Ontos. pp. 10--163. 2007.
  •  23
    Ein Gedankenbogen
    Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 57 (1). 2009.
  •  251
    From a critique of cognitive internalism to a conception of objective spirit: Reflections on Descombes' anthropological holism
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 47 (3). 2004.
    IntentionalityMetaphysics of MindMeaning Holism
  •  101
    Ein Gedankenbogen. Rortys Weg vom eliminativen Materialismus zum Pragmatismus
    Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 57 (1): 5-11. 2009.
    The paper explores the unity of Richard Rorty's philosophy. It interprets his „eliminative materialism“ as stemming from the insight that the language games we use in talking about ourselves and each other are the result of our own choice, they are not forced on us from the „outside“. It interprets Rorty's later development as an application of this thought to the field of the objective: Can „brute facts“ prescribe how we speak about them? The paper argues that in this field there are also choic…Read more
    The paper explores the unity of Richard Rorty's philosophy. It interprets his „eliminative materialism“ as stemming from the insight that the language games we use in talking about ourselves and each other are the result of our own choice, they are not forced on us from the „outside“. It interprets Rorty's later development as an application of this thought to the field of the objective: Can „brute facts“ prescribe how we speak about them? The paper argues that in this field there are also choices we have to make concerning our social activity of speaking, but that this does not necessarily deprive the word „objectivity“ of its meaning, as the author has worked out in Making it Explicit.
    Eliminative MaterialismRichard Rorty
  •  410
    Freedom and Constraint by Norms
    American Philosophical Quarterly 16 (3): 187-196. 1979.
    In this paper I will examine one way of developing Kant's suggestion that one is free just insofar as he acts according to the dictates of norms or principles. and of his distinction between the Realm of Nature, governed by causes, and the Realm of Freedom, governed by norms and principles. Kant's transcendental machinery—the distinction between Understanding and Reason, the free noumenal self expressed somehow as a causally constrained phenomenal self, and so on—can no longer secure this distin…Read more
    In this paper I will examine one way of developing Kant's suggestion that one is free just insofar as he acts according to the dictates of norms or principles. and of his distinction between the Realm of Nature, governed by causes, and the Realm of Freedom, governed by norms and principles. Kant's transcendental machinery—the distinction between Understanding and Reason, the free noumenal self expressed somehow as a causally constrained phenomenal self, and so on—can no longer secure this distinction for us. It is just too mysterious to serve as an explanation of freedom. Yet some distinction between the realm of facts and the realm of norms must be established if the notion of freedom as normative rather than causal constraint is to be redeemed. In this paper I will present a version of this distinction which was not envisioned by Kant, and show how a novel response to the dispute between naturalists and non-naturalists concerning the relation of fact to norm can be developed out of that rendering. I will then argue that the account of human freedom which results from this story needs to be supplemented in just the ways which Hegel claimed Kant's account needed to be supplemented, and will recommend an Hegelian self-expressive successor.
    Freedom and Liberty
  •  6
    Expressive versus Explanatory Deflationism about Truth
    In Bradley P. Armour-Garb & J. C. Beall (eds.), Deflationary Truth, Open Court Press. pp. 237-257. 2005.
    Prosentential Theory of TruthProsententialism about TruthDeflationism about Truth, Misc
  •  159
    Critical notice of Blind and Worried or The Sorter Resorted
    Theoria 70 (2-3): 298-302. 2004.
    Aspects of Consciousness
  • Critical Notice of Blind and Worried
    Theoria 70 2-3. 2005.
  •  394
    Between saying and doing: towards an analytic pragmatism
    Oxford University Press. 2008.
    Extending the project of analysis -- Elaborating abilities : the expressive role of logic -- Artificial intelligence and analytic pragmatism -- Modality and normativity : from Hume and Quine to Kant and Sellars -- Incompatibility, modal semantics, and intrinsic logic -- Intentionality as a pragmatically mediated semantic relation -- Afterword : philosophical analysis and analytic philosophy.
    Wilfrid SellarsMetaphilosophical ViewsLogical Expressivism
  •  174
    Dasein, the Being that Thematizes
    Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 5 (1-2): 1-38. 1997.
    History of Western Philosophy20th Century Philosophy
  •  243
    Conceptual Content and Discursive Practice
    Grazer Philosophische Studien 81 (1): 13-35. 2010.
    This paper discusses the integrated approach to the semantics and pragmatics of language developed in my Making It Explicit. The core claim is that there are six consequential relations among commitments and entitlements that are sufficient for a practice exhibiting them to qualify as discursive, that is, as a practice of giving and asking for reasons, hence as one conferring genuinely conceptual content on the expressions, performances, and statuses that have scorekeeping significances in those…Read more
    This paper discusses the integrated approach to the semantics and pragmatics of language developed in my Making It Explicit. The core claim is that there are six consequential relations among commitments and entitlements that are sufficient for a practice exhibiting them to qualify as discursive, that is, as a practice of giving and asking for reasons, hence as one conferring genuinely conceptual content on the expressions, performances, and statuses that have scorekeeping significances in those practices. I divide the six consequential relations into two groups, the fundamental-semantic and the social-pragmatic, and I characterise the complex interactions between them. The bold and potentially falsifiable overall claim is that any practice that exhibits this full six-fold structure will be interpretable in a broadly Davidsonian sense: roughly, mappable onto ours in a way that makes conversation with us possible.
    IntentionalityInferentialist Accounts of Meaning and Content
  •  257
    Action, norms, and practical reasoning
    Philosophical Perspectives 12 127-139. 1998.
    Ethics
  • Carnap, Rudolf, 17,114,115 n, 227, 252 Cams, Paul, 43 Chisholm, Roderick, 17 Chomsky, Noam, 130
    with St Thomas Aquinas, Richard J. Bernstein, Bernard Bosanquet, James Henry Breasted, Joseph Brent, Rodney A. Brooks, and Wendell T. Bush
    In F. Thomas Burke, D. Micah Hester & Robert B. Talisse (eds.), Dewey's logical theory: new studies and interpretations, Vanderbilt University Press. 2002.
    Roderick Chisholm
  •  62
    Action, Norms, and Practical Reasoning
    Noûs 32 (S12): 127-139. 1998.
    Ethics
  •  680
    Asserting
    Noûs 17 (4): 637-650. 1983.
  •  123
    Asserting
    Journal of Philosophy 77 (11): 766-767. 1980.
    Assertion
  • Names Index
    with Theodor W. Adorno, R. Alexy, James Averill, James Mark Baldwin, Nigel Barley, Richard Bernstein, Simon Blackburn, James Bohman, and F. H. Bradley
    In K. R. Stueber & H. H. Kogaler (eds.), Empathy and Agency: The Problem of Understanding in the Human Sciences, Boulder: Westview Press. 2000.
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