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  1. 16 de may. de 2024 · Wilfrid Sellars (born May 20, 1912, Ann Arbor, Mich., U.S.—died July 2, 1989, Pittsburgh, Pa.) was an American philosopher best known for his critique of traditional philosophical conceptions of mind and knowledge and for his uncompromising effort to explain how human reason and thought can be reconciled with the vision of nature ...

  2. 7 de may. de 2024 · Resumen. El presente trabajo identifica en la obra de Wilfrid Sellars dos tesis relevantes para el debate contemporáneo en ontología social. La primera dice que podemos entender la realidad social como estando compuesta parcialmente por estructuras causales o coercitivas.

  3. 25 de may. de 2024 · tl;dr: Wherein I try to motivate epistemology as a tactical tool, sketch an approach to accounting for knowledge from Wilfrid Sellars--the Intersubjective, and the come full circle to argue for ...

  4. • 1 day ago. fatblob1234. Can someone ELI5 Sellars's attack on the Myth of the Given. So as many of you know, Wilfrid Sellars is notoriously difficult to read, and I've tried to read Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind multiple times, but I don't think brute forcing my way through it would be of any help.

  5. 10 de may. de 2024 · As Wilfrid Sellars says, the existence of other things is “essentially bound up with the fact that they are either ‘predicated of’ or ‘present in’ primary substances.” Footnote 18 Aristotle’s conclusion may thus be understood as follows: if primary substances did not exist (as subjects for other things) it would be ...

  6. 25 de may. de 2024 · In exploring McDowell’s treatment of this question, we will discuss the work of two other authors on whom he draws, John Cook and Wilfrid Sellars. In Unit 2, we’ll move to an examination of Barry Stroud’s textually subtle reading of a number of the passages in the Investigations that have most preoccupied readers of the book since it was first published.

  7. Hace 1 día · So, very bluntly, meanings are similar to rules of use. The way inferentialism distinguishes itself as a use-theory of meaning is with the claim that the paradigmatic kind of use consists of drawing certain types of inferences, called by Brandom (after Wilfrid Sellars) ‘material inferences’ (1994, 97).

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