Attempts to determine whether nonhuman animals have minds are often thought to raise a particular sceptical concern; I call it the problem of animal minds. If there are such things as animal minds, the sceptic reasons, they will be private realms to which we humans do not have direct epistemological access. So how could one ever know for certain that animals are not mindless mechanisms? In this paper I use a phenomenological approach to show that this familiar sceptical problem presupposes an account of our relations with others which is both too individualistic and too 'mentalistic' to shed interpretative light on our relations with animals. I conclude that although inquiries into how animals experience the world raise a host of difficult problems, they do not raise one big problem, the problem of animal minds, which must be solved before any such inquiries can get off the ground.
机构:
CUNY, Borough Manhattan Community Coll, Acad Literacy & Linguist Dept, 199 Chambers St,Room N-499, New York, NY 10007 USACUNY, Borough Manhattan Community Coll, Acad Literacy & Linguist Dept, 199 Chambers St,Room N-499, New York, NY 10007 USA
机构:
Department of History and Philosophy of Science, Indiana University, BloomingtonDepartment of History and Philosophy of Science, Indiana University, Bloomington
Allen C.
Bekoff M.
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Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Colorado, BoulderDepartment of History and Philosophy of Science, Indiana University, Bloomington