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Book reviews for "Jacquette,_Dale" sorted by average review score:

Philosophy of Mind
Published in Textbook Binding by Pearson Education POD (29 December, 1993)
Authors: Dale Jacquette and Dale Jaquette
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Very bad philosophy.
I have read a lot of books, introductory and advanced, on the philosophy of mind, but I rarely review them. However, this book had some flaws that were just so evident that I felt I had a responsability to comment on them. But of course, I will not just shun the book and leave. Not everything that is flawed is useless. This book, far from being useless, is an adequate introduction to the philosophy of mind. But the author does not have this as his only goal, and also attempts to defend a property dualistic ontology of mind. He is also an emergentist, but here I have few objections. But emergentism itself is not incompatible with materialism, as the author seems to imply sometimes.

The book is short, easy to read, and covers the necessary ground for any begginer who wants to learn the generalso of philosophy of mind. There are chapters on the diferent types of dualism, materialism, philosophy of artificial intelligence and on intentionality. The author discusses classic and modern positions in all of these things, and makes it all clear and non-technical. The problem is that everytime he tries to attack some position or other, he simply does not seem to succeed. I mean, even Descartes's substance dualism is defensible form Jacquettes critique! Now to be more specific, I will limit myself to his main argument against materialism, for wich he concludes propery dualism is a better bet at expaining the ontology of mind.

The argument is roughly as follows (Pge 20): The mind has intentionallity. The body as such does not. Therefore the mind cannott be fully explained by alluding to purely physical (body) processes. Here the property of being intentional leads one to property dualism, according to Jacquette. Now anyone with any knowledge of philosophy of mind will quickly point out that the 2 premises can be attacked, as can the conclusion even when one accepts the validity of the premises. First, it is not clear why intentionality could not be explained physically. Jacquette begs the question in assuming that this is not possible. John Searle, for example, is a materialist, even though he accepts the importance of intentionality. So to say that the body as such can have no intentionality is begging the same question. And finally, the fact that mind and body might have diferent properties does not necessarily lead one to any kind of dualism, for the differences might be only in virtue of epistemistic access. That is, if one knows something by description instead of by aquaintance, one may believe one of these descriptions has a property that the other does not, even when they refer to the same things.(In fact, this is related to Jacksons knowledge argument, of which Jacquette talks inadequately). To illustrate my points, and to show to what extent Jaquettes discussion is incoherent look at this extract:

"conceivably...imput-output simulations of mind, in which physical syntax tokens casually interact with themselves in an apropiate...enviroment, might duplicate the brain's power to produce...intentional thought.." (pge 81).

Here the author accepts the posibility that intentionallity might be physically realizable after all! What happened to the intentionality argument?
The author gives no reason of why physicalism might be inadequate to explain the mind fully, and offers the worst defence of property dualism I have read yet. Nothing I have said can be taken to imply that physicalism is true, however.


Philosophical Entrees: Classic and Contemporary Readings in Philosophy
Published in Paperback by McGraw-Hill Humanities/Social Sciences/Languages (16 June, 2000)
Author: Dale Jacquette
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antiseptic formalism
This is philosophy at its most antiseptic and formal worst. Some of the readings are worthwhile, certainly, although the contemporary selections are almost entirely the work of analytical philosophers occupied with quite narrowly professional concerns. Instructors would be in much better pedagogical shape if they used a text with a thicker, broader minded, more historically grounded conception of philosophty, or else just assigned several primary texts from among a collection of major thinkers.


Wittgenstein's Thought in Transition (History of Philosophy Series)
Published in Paperback by Purdue University Press (April, 1998)
Author: Dale Jacquette
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clearly written but with little depth
This book moves along smoothly, clearly, logically--but it displays little of the philosophical strength of books on Wittgenstein by authors as diverse as Michael Hodges or, more recently, Jose Medina. The author is familiar with Wittgenstein's texts, but is not able to do anything philosophically original or important with them.


The Cambridge Companion to Brentano
Published in Hardcover by Cambridge University Press (January, 2004)
Author: Dale Jacquette
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A Companion to Philosophical Logic (Blackwell Companions to Philosophy)
Published in Hardcover by Blackwell Publishers (February, 2002)
Author: Dale Jacquette
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David Hume's Critique of Infinity (Brill's Studies in Intellectual History, V. 102)
Published in Hardcover by Brill Academic Publishers (January, 2001)
Author: Dale Jacquette
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Meinongian Logic: The Semantics of Existence and Nonexistence (Perspectives in Analytical Philosophy, Bd 11)
Published in Hardcover by Walter de Gruyter, Inc. (April, 1997)
Author: Dale Jacquette
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On Boole
Published in Paperback by Wadsworth Publishing (21 November, 2001)
Author: Dale Jacquette
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Ontology
Published in Paperback by McGill-Queens University Press (February, 2003)
Author: Dale Jacquette
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Pathways in Philosophy: An Introductory Guide with Readings
Published in Paperback by Oxford University Press (September, 2003)
Author: Dale Jacquette
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