Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
I . DETECTIVISM AND CONSTITUTIVISM
1. Detectivism
1.1. Old Detectivism
1.2. New Detectivism
1.3. A Dialogue
2. Constitutivism
2.1. “A Kind of Decision”
2.2. Interpretation and Stipulation
2.3. The Responsibility Objection
3. Between Detectivism and Constitutivism
3.1. Experience and the Logical Space of Reasons
3.2. The Middle Path
3.3. When a Dog Feels Pain
3.4. The Phantom Smell Objection
3.5. Back to Detectivism?
II . EXPRESSION
4.1. Meaning
4.2. Expression
4.3. Expressivism
5.1. A Three-Paragraph Account of First-Person Authority
5.2. Other Varieties of First-Person Authority
5.3. Expression and Context
5.4. Conscious or Unconscious
5.5. Between Conscious and Unconscious
5.6. The Logical Space of Animate Life
6. Sensations, Animals, and Knowledge
6.1. “But Isn’t the Beginning the Sensation—Which I Describe?"
6.2. “It Is Not a Something, but Not a Nothing Either!”
6.3. The Mental as Such
6.4. Self-Knowledge?
Postscript: Deliberation and Transparency
Abbreviations Used in This Book
References
Index