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Brandon Fenton

York University
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  •  Publications
    3
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 More details
  • York University
    Department of Philosophy
    Graduate student
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Action
Philosophy of Mind
  • All publications (3)
  •  90
    Shared Agency: A Planning Theory of Acting TogetherMICHAEL E. BRATMAN New York: Oxford University Press, 2014; 219 pp.; $32.95 (paperback) doi: 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199897933.001.0001 (review)
    Dialogue 54 (1): 188-189. 2015.
    Collective ActionCollective Intentions
  •  88
    Spinoza for our time: Politics and postmodernity Antonio Negri new York: Columbia university press, 2013; 125 pp.; $24.00 (review)
    Dialogue 54 (3): 548-550. 2015.
  •  56
    Character and concept : how conceptual blending constrains situationism
    This thesis is an attempt to defend the notion of character from concerns raised recently by situationists. Situationism attempts to undermine the concept of character used to support most versions of virtue ethics by appealing to research in the social sciences. More specifically, both John Doris and Gilbert Harman are global character trait eliminativists who take the social-psychological research to warrant the abandonment of the concept of character. This thesis draws heavily upon the mental…Read more
    This thesis is an attempt to defend the notion of character from concerns raised recently by situationists. Situationism attempts to undermine the concept of character used to support most versions of virtue ethics by appealing to research in the social sciences. More specifically, both John Doris and Gilbert Harman are global character trait eliminativists who take the social-psychological research to warrant the abandonment of the concept of character. This thesis draws heavily upon the mental space mapping theory known as conceptual blending developed by Gilles Fauconnier and Mark Turner. I make use of the insights provided by conceptual blending theory in an attempt to disarm the situationists' character eliminativist position by showing how entrenched and useful is the notion of character to our common understandings and interpretations of ourselves and others.
    Skepticism about Character
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