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Modern Classics Concept of Mind

Modern Classics Concept of Mind( )
Author: Ryle, Gilbert
Foreword by: Dennett, Daniel
Series title:Penguin Classics Ser.
ISBN:978-0-14-118217-9
Publication Date:Oct 2000
Publisher:Penguin Books, Limited
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:AUD $29.99
Book Description:

This epoch-making book cuts through confused thinking and forces us to re-examine many cherished ideas about knowledge, imagination, consciousness and the intellect. The result is a classic example of philosophy.

Book Details
Pages:336
Detailed Subjects: Psychology / General
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):13.5 x 19.8 x 1.6 cm
Book Weight:0.238 Kilograms
Author Biography
Ryle, Gilbert (Author)
Gilbert Ryle exerted an influence over academic philosophers in the English-speaking world almost without equal at midcentury. As Waynefleet Professor of Philosophy at Oxford University and as G. E. Moore's successor to the editorship of Mind, the most prestigious philosophical journal in Great Britain, Ryle shaped the orientation of philosophical discussion for more than a decade. Independently of Ludwig Wittgenstein, he invented a philosophical method of linguistic analysis, maintaining indeed that systematic confusions in theory stemmed from misleading grammatical expressions. Ryle's most remarkable contribution to philosophy, however, was in the area of philosophy of mind. His crowning achievement was The Concept of Mind (1949). Utilizing his method of linguistic analysis on a discourse about mind and the mental, he maintained that the radical distinction between mind and body, Cartesian dualism, stemmed from category mistakes. A felicitous writer with a distinctively colloquial style free of jargon, Ryle invented phrases---such as "the ghost in the machine" to indicate supposed Cartesian mental substance---that still reverberate in the literature of philosophy and psychology. 020



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