The Intentional Stance
Appearance
1. Setting Off on the Right Foot
- The Manifest Image - Our nervous systems were designed to make the distinctions we need swiftly and reliably, to bring under single sensory rubrics the relevant common features in our environment, and to ignore what we can usually get away with ignoring.
- We have it thanks to extraordinarily efficient and reliable systems of expectation-generation.
- Compare this to the scientific image
- We make sense of each other by adopting the intentional stance.
2. True Believers
- While belief is a perfectly objective phenomenon, it can be discerned only from the point of view of one who adopts a certain predictive strategy.
- Any system whose behavior is well predicted by this strategy is in the fullest sense of the word a believer. What it is to be a true believer is to be an intentional system, a system whose behavior is reliably and voluminously predictable via the intentional strategy.
- Strategies of understanding:
- The physical strategy/Stance - Use your knowledge of the laws of physics
- The design stance - Based on the assumption that a system has a design, predict that it will behave as it was designed to under various circumstances. Many biological objects are, in this sense, not just physical systems, but designed systems.
- The intentional stance - Treat the object whose behavior is to be predicted as a rational agent, figure out what beliefs that agent ought to have and what desires it ought to have, and then predict that it will act to further its goals in the light of its beliefs.
- In general, it seems we come to believe all the truths about the parts of the world around us we are put in a position to learn about.
- Many perfectly detectable, graspable, memorable facts are of no interest to me and hence do not come to be believed by me, so we should attribute as beliefs all the truths relevant to the system's interests (or desires) that the system's experience to date has made available.
- False beliefs have to start somewhere, the seed may be sown in hallucination, illusion, a normal variety of simple misperception, memory deterioration, or deliberate fraud.
- All but the smallest portion (say 10%) of a person's beliefs are likely true.
- Distinction between belief and opinion (where the latter are linguistically infected, relatively sophisticated cognitive states - essentially sentences)
- Desires are normally survival, absence of pain, food, comfort, procreation, entertainment, and are things a system believes to be good for it or the best means to other ends it desires.
- Language enables us to formulate highly specific desires, but it also forces us on occasion to commit ourselves to desires altogether more stringent in their conditions of satisfaction than anything we would otherwise have any reason to endeavor to satisfy.
- One can easily be misled, since we are language-using creatures, into thinking that it is obvious that beliefs and desires are rather like sentences stored in the head. But these are special cases of belief and desire and as such may not be reliable models for the whole domain.
3. Three Kinds of Intentional Psychology
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4. Making Sense of Ourselves
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5. Beyond Belief
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6. Styles of Mental Representation
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7. Intentional Systems in Cognitive Ethnology: The "Panglossian Paradigm" Defended
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8. Evolution, Error, and Intentionality
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9. Fast Thinking
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10. Mid-Term Examination: Compare and Contrast
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