Sydney Shoemaker

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  •  8
    Parfit on identity
    In Jonathan Dancy (ed.), Reading Parfit, Wiley-blackwell. pp. 135--148. 1997.
  •  990
    Personal Identity: Great Debates in Philosophy
    with S. Swinburne
    Blackwell. 1984.
    What does it mean to say that this person at this time is 'the same' as that person at an earlier time? If the brain is damaged or the memory lost, how far does a person's identity continue? In this book two eminent philosophers develop very different approaches to the problem.
  •  726
    Persons and their pasts
    American Philosophical Quarterly 7 (4): 269-85. 1970.
  •  312
    Physical Realization
    Oxford University Press UK. 2007.
    In Physical Realization, Sydney Shoemaker considers the question of how physicalism can be true: how can all facts about the world, including mental ones, be constituted by facts about the distribution in the world of physical properties? Physicalism requires that the mental properties of a person are 'realized in' the physical properties of that person, and that all instantiations of properties in macroscopic objects are realized in microphysical states of affairs. Shoemaker offers an account o…Read more
  •  8
    On an argument for dualism
    In Carl Ginet & Sydney Shoemaker (eds.), Knowledge and Mind: Essays Presented to Norman Malcolm, Oxford Univresity Press. 1983.
  •  201
    On projecting the unprojectible
    Philosophical Review 84 (2): 178-219. 1975.
  •  204
    On What There Are
    Philosophical Topics 16 (1): 201-223. 1988.
  •  431
    On David Chalmers’s The Conscious Mind (review)
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 59 (2): 439-444. 1999.
    One does not have to agree with the main conclusions of David Chalmers’s book in order to find it stimulating, instructive, and frequently brilliant. If Chalmers’s arguments succeed, his achievement will of course be enormous; he will have overthrown the materialist orthodoxy that has reigned in philosophy of mind and cognitive science for the last half century. If, as I think, they fail, his achievement is nevertheless considerable. For his arguments draw on, and give forceful and eloquent expr…Read more
  •  643
    Kim on Emergence
    Philosophical Studies 108 (1-2): 53-63. 2002.
    Emergence requires that the ultimate physical micro-entities have “micro-latent” causal powers, which manifest themselves only when the entities are combined in ways that are “emergence-engendering,” in addition to the “micro-manifest” powers that account for their behavior in other circumstances. Subjects of emergent properties will have emergent micro-structural properties, specified partly in terms of these micro-latent powers, each of which will be determined by a micro-structural property s…Read more
  •  643
    Persons, animals, and identity
    Synthese 162 (3). 2007.
    The paper is concerned with how neo-Lockean accounts of personal identity should respond to the challenge of animalist accounts. Neo-Lockean accounts that hold that persons can change bodies via brain transplants or cerebrum transplants are committed to the prima facie counterintuitive denial that a person is an (biologically individuated) animal. This counterintuitiveness can be defused by holding that a person is biological animal (on neo-Lockean views) if the “is” is the “is” of constitution …Read more
  •  384
    On knowing one’s own mind
    Philosophical Perspectives 2 183-209. 1988.
  •  148
    Lovely and suspect ideas (review)
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 53 (4): 903-908. 1993.
  •  206
    Persistence and Properties
    Journal of the American Philosophical Association 1 (3): 433--448. 2015.
  •  210
    Moran on Self‐Knowledge
    European Journal of Philosophy 11 (3): 391-401. 2003.
  •  440
    Identity Cause and Mind
    Oxford University Press UK. 2003.
    This is an expanded edition of Sydney Shoemaker's seminal collection of his work on interrelated issues in the philosophy of mind and metaphysics. It reproduces all of the original papers, many of which are now regarded as classics, and includes four papers published since the first edition appeared in 1984. Themes include the nature of self-knowledge and self-reference, personal identity, persistence over time, properties, mental states, and perceptual experience.A number of the papers, includi…Read more
  •  150
    These lectures have been organized around the question of whether there is any good sense in which our introspective access to our own mental states is a kind of perception, something that can appropriately be called "inner sense." In my first lecture I distinguished two versions of the perception model of introspection, based on two different stereotypes of sense perception. One of these, based primarily on the case of vision, is what I called the object perceptual model -- it takes perception …Read more
  •  1171
  •  490
    Introspection and phenomenal character
    Philosophical Topics 28 (2): 247--73. 2000.
    […] One view I hold about the nature of phenomenal character, which is also a view about the relation between phenomenal character and the introspective belief about it, is that phenomenal character is “self intimating.” This means that it is of the essence of a state’s having a certain phenomenal character that this issues in the subject’s being introspectively aware of that character, or does so if the subject reflects. Part of my aim is to give an account which makes it intelligible that this…Read more
  •  93
    Immortality and Dualism
    In Stuart C. Brown (ed.), Reason and Religion, Wiley-blackwell. 1976.
  •  427
    Introspection and the self
    Midwest Studies in Philosophy 10 (1): 101-120. 1986.
    The absence of identification of oneself tells against the view that introspection is a form of self-perception
  •  64
    Colors, Subjective Reactions, and Qualia
    Philosophical Issues 7 55-66. 1996.
  •  506
    Content, character, and color
    Philosophical Issues 13 (1): 253-78. 2003.
    The words “content” and “character” in my title refer to the representational content and phenomenal character of color experiences. So my topic concerns the nature of our experience of color. But I will, of course, be talking about colors as well as color experience. Let me set the stage by mentioning some things, some more controversial than others, that I will be taking for granted. I assume, to begin with, that objects in the world have colors, and have them independently of being perceived …Read more