•  8
    A Selection of Papers Contributed to Sections IV, VI, and XI of the Fourth International Congress for Logic, Methodology, and Philosophy of Science, Bucharest, September 1971.
  •  2
    Patrick Suppes (edited book)
    Reidel. 1979.
    The aim of this series is to inform both professional philosophers and a larger readership (of social and natural scientists, methodologists, mathematicians, students, teachers, publishers, etc.) about what is going on, who's who, and who does what in contemporary philosophy and logic. PROFILES is designed to present the research activity and the results of already outstanding personalities and schools and of newly emerging ones in the various fields of philosophy and logic. There are many Fests…Read more
  •  21
    The theme of this essay is rather simple, though its demonstration is not. It is that humans think reflexively or metamentally because -- and often in the forms in which -- they interpret each other. In this essay ‘metamental’ means ‘about mental’ and ‘reflexive mind’ means ‘a mind thinking about its own thoughts.’ To think reflexively or metamentally is to think about thoughts deliberately and explicitly, as in thinking that my current thoughts about metamentation are right. Thinking about thou…Read more
  •  31
    Logic, language, and probability (edited book)
    D. Reidel Pub. Co.. 1973.
    AN INTENSIONAL INTERPRETATION OF TRUTH-VALUES* 1. Introduction In a profound and seminal paper of 1956 'Begrundung einer strengen Implikation', JSL), ...
  • Logică, pe înțelesul tuturor
    Editura enciclopedică română. 1974.
  •  3
    Reviews (review)
    Theory and Decision 5 (2): 243-247. 1974.
  •  10
    Communication by Ramsey-Sentence Clause
    with Herbert G. Bohnert, Israel Scheffler, Ilkka Niniluoto, and I. Niiniluoto
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 39 (3): 617-619. 1974.
  •  3
    Reviews (review)
    with Hermann Vetter, F. Gregory Hayden, Robert H. Puckett, and Mario Bunge
    Theory and Decision 6 (1): 103-120. 1975.
  •  12
    This book explores the evolution of the mental competence for self-reflection: why it evolved, under what selection pressures, in what environments, out of what precursors, and with what mental resources. Integrating evolutionary, psychological, and philosophical perspectives, Radu J. Bogdan argues that the competence for self-reflection, uniquely human and initially autobiographical, evolved under strong and persistent sociocultural and political pressures on the developing minds of older child…Read more
  •  9
    The Architectural Nonchalance of Commonsense Psychology
    Mind and Language 8 (2): 189-205. 2007.
  •  1
    Local Induction
    Philosophy of Science 44 (1): 173-177. 1977.
  •  48
    Roderick M. Chisholm (edited book)
    Reidel. 1986.
    The aim of this series is to inform both professional philosophers and a larger readership (of social and natural scientists, methodologists, mathematicians, students, teachers, publishers, etc. ) about what is going on, who's who, and who does what in contemporary philosophy and logic. PROFILES is designed to present the research activity and the results of already outstanding personalities and schools and of newly emerging ones in the various fields of philosophy and logic. There are many Fest…Read more
  •  39
    Introduction
    Synthese 159 (2): 149-150. 2007.
  • The Pragmatics of Knowledge
    Dissertation, Stanford University. 1980.
    This essay focuses critically on two major targets, called representationalism and naturalism, whose assumptions and conclusions are examined in almost each chapter, relative to the topic of interest. Both views are shown to ignore cognitive agency and the pragmatics of an agent's current cognition. In the search for objective and infallible guarantees of knowledge both views end up being "subsystemic epistemologies". In contrast, the general message of this essay is that we need an agent-orient…Read more
  •  24
    In this paper, I explore the effects of religious denomination and patterns of church-going on the construction of political values for high-school students. I argue that religion plays a role in the formation of political attitudes among teenagers and it influences their political participation. I examine whether this relationship is constructed along denominational lines. From a theoretical perspective, previous research heralded the compatibility between Western Christianity and the democrati…Read more
  •  116
      Communication by shared meaning, themastery of word semantics,metarepresentation and metamentation aremental abilities, uniquely human, that share a sense ofintentionality or reference. The latteris developed by a naive psychology or interpretation – acompetence dedicated to representingintentional relations between conspecifics and the world. Theidea that interpretation builds new mentalabilities around a sense of reference is based on three linesof analysis – conceptual, psychological andevo…Read more
  •  123
    The architectural nonchalance of commonsense psychology
    Mind and Language 8 (2): 189-205. 1993.
    Eliminativism assumes that commonsense psychology describes and explains the mind in terms of the internal design and operation of the mind. If this assumption is invalidated, so is eliminativism. The same conditional is true of intentional realism. Elsewhere (Bogdan 1991) I have argued against this 'folk- theory-theory' assumption by showing that commonsense psychology is not an empirical prototheory of the mind but a biosocially motivated practice of coding, utilizing, and sharing information …Read more
  •  125
    Pretending as imaginative rehearsal for cultural conformity
    Journal of Cognition and Culture 5 (1-2): 191-213. 2005.
    Pretend play and pretense develop in distinct phases of childhood as ontogenetically adaptive responses to pressures specific to those phases, and may have evolved in different periods of human ancestry. These are pressures to assimilate cultural artifacts, norms, roles, and behavioral scripts. The playful and creative elements in both forms of pretending are dictated by the variable, open-ended, and evolving nature and function of the cultural tasks they handle. The resulting creativity of the a…Read more
  • Memory as Window on the Mind
    In Alexandru Manafu (ed.), The Prospects for Fusion Emergence, Boston Studies in the Philosophy and History of Science, Vol. 313. 2015.
  • Wyklady Z Metodologii Nauk
    with Ryszard Wójcicki, Nuel D. Belnap, Thomas B. Steel, and G. E. Kréjdlin
    Studia Logica 42 (4): 478-479. 1983.
  •  22
    Interpreting Minds by
    with Vg Hardcastle
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 60 (3): 737-740. 2000.
  •  26
    Determining what is perceived
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 6 (1): 66-67. 1983.
  •  37
  •  21
    Review of Radu J. Bogdan: Interpreting Minds: The Evolution of a Practice (review)
    with Tony Stone
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 50 (3): 492-496. 1999.
  •  19
    This chapter provides the teleological foundations for our analysis of guidance to goal. Its objective is to ground goal-directedness genetically. The basic suggestion is this. Organisms are small things, with few energy resources and puny physical means, battling a ruthless physical and biological nature. How do they manage to survive and multiply? CLEVERLY, BY ORGANIZING
  •  24
    More theory and evolution
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 18 (1): 390-391. 1991.
    Heyes’s skepticism about theory of mind (ToM) in nonhuman primates exploits the idea of a strong and unified theory of mind in humans based on an unanalyzed category of mental state. It also exploits narrow debates about crucial observations and experiments while neglecting wider evolutionary trends. I argue against both exploitations
  • Ladislav Tondl, "Scientific Procedures" (review)
    Theory and Decision 5 (2): 245. 1974.