Tamas Demeter

Corvinus University of Budapest
  • Katalin Neumer: Die Relativität der Grenzen. Studien zur Philosophie Wittgensteins (review)
    Philosophischer Literaturanzeiger 54 (3). 2001.
  •  553
    Folk Psychology Is Not a Metarepresentational Device
    European Journal of Analytic Philosophy 5 (2): 19-38. 2009.
    Here I challenge the philosophical consensus that we use folk psychology for the purposes of metarepresentation. The paper intends to show that folk psychology should not be conceived on par with fact-stating discourses in spite of what its surface semantics may suggest. I argue that folk-psychological discourse is organised in a way and has conceptual characteristics such that it cannot fulfill a fact-stating function. To support this claim I develop an open question argument for psychological …Read more
  •  55
    Can the Strong Program Be Generalized?
    Review of Sociology 15 (1): 5-16. 2009.
    I argue that, despite recent attempts, the strong program in the sociology of knowledge cannot be applied as a general method of inquiry in the history of ideas. My main point is that its methodological commitments only allow the strong program to be fruitful in those fields of knowledge whose content can be given by truth conditions. But even in these fields sociological questions can be asked that are not sensitive to truth conditional content. In these cases, as I argue, a hermeneutic method …Read more
  •  140
    The sociological tradition of Hungarian philosophy
    Studies in East European Thought 60 (1): 1-16. 2008.
    In this introductory paper I sketch the tradition, several early aspects of which are discussed in the following essays and reviews. I introduce the main figures whose work initiated and maintained the sociological orientation in Hungarian philosophy thereby tracing its evolution. I suggest that its sociological outlook, if taken to be a characteristic tendency that gives Hungarian philosophy its distinctive flavour, provides us with the framework of a possible narrative about the history of Hun…Read more
  •  35
    In this paper I challenge the widely held view which associates Hume’s philosophy with mechanical philosophies of nature and particularly with Newton. This view presents Hume’s account of the human mind as passive receiver of impressions which bring into motion, from the outside, a mental machinery whose functioning is described in terms of mechanical causal principles. Instead, I propose an interpretation which suggests that for Hume the human mind is composed of faculties that can be character…Read more
  •  397
    In Defence of Empty Realism
    Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 41 (1): 195-197. 2010.
    This piece defends the distinction I have drawn in my "Two Kinds of Mental Realism" against criticism put forward in János Tőzsér's "Mental Realism Reloaded".
  •  1
    Essays on Wittgenstein and Austrian Philosophy—In Honour of J. C. Nyíri
    Studies in East European Thought 60 (1-2): 159-163. 2008.
  •  72
    J.C. Nyíri’s work is well-known for his interpretation of Wittgenstein as a conservative thinker. Nevertheless, his reading of Wittgenstein is only one strand, even if presumably the most influential one, in his general interpretation of Austro-Hungarian philosophy. Therefore his reading of Wittgenstein is best understood if viewed as part of a complex, sociologically inspired picture of Austrian philosophy. In this introductory essay I present Nyíri’s work as an exercise in the sociology of phi…Read more
  • Stephen Mumford: Dispositions (review)
    Philosophischer Literaturanzeiger 54 (2). 2001.
  •  223
    Mental Fictionalism
    The Monist 96 (4): 483-504. 2013.
  •  187
    Hume's Experimental Method
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 20 (3): 577-599. 2012.
    In this article I attempt to reconstruct David Hume's use of the label?experimental? to characterise his method in the Treatise. Although its meaning may strike the present-day reader as unusual, such a reconstruction is possible from the background of eighteenth-century practices and concepts of natural inquiry. As I argue, Hume's inquiries into human nature are experimental not primarily because of the way the empirical data he uses are produced, but because of the way those data are theoretic…Read more
  • David Bloor: Wittgenstein, Rules and Institutions (review)
    Philosophischer Literaturanzeiger 52 (3). 1999.
  •  156
    Weltanschauung as a priori: sociology of knowledge from a 'romantic' stance
    Studies in East European Thought 64 (1-2): 39-52. 2012.
    In this paper I reconstruct the central concept of the young Lukács’s and Mannheim’s sociology of knowledge, as they present it in their writings in the early decades of the twentieth century. I argue that this concept, namely Weltanschauung, is used to refer to some conceptually unstructured totality of feelings, which they take to be a condition of possibility of intellectual production, and this understanding is contrasted to an alternative construal of the term that presents it as logically …Read more
  •  86
    Review: Beyond Wittgenstein (review)
    with J. C. Nyíri, Kristóf Nyíri, and Katalin Neumer
    Studies in East European Thought 51 (4): 329-340. 1999.
  •  126
    From classical studies towards epistemology: The work of józsef Balogh
    Studies in East European Thought 51 (4): 287-305. 1999.
    In this paper, I introduce a prominent classical scholar, József Balogh, whose work can be read as a significant contribution to the historiography of ancient, and in some sense modern, philosophy. Following a summary biography, I sketch the relevance of Balogh''s interpretation of Augustine. I draw some analogies between his and Eric Havelock''s treatment of the problems in ancient philosophy, and argue that the obvious similarities between them have a common origin, namely the perspective of t…Read more