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Miscellaneous Philosophy of Mind :: Self-Knowledge :: Self-Knowledge, Misc

Barton Perry, Ralph (1909). The mind's familiarity with itself. Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 6 (5):113-122.   (Google | Edit)
Beare, John I. (1896). Self-knowledge. Mind 5 (18):227-235.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Benjamin, Harry (1971). Basic Self-Knowledge. London: Samuel Weiser.   (Cited by 4 | Google | Edit)
Bergmann, Gustav (1949). Professor Ayer's analysis of knowing. Analysis 9 (June):98-106.   (Google | Edit)
Bermudez, Jose Luis (2003). The elusiveness thesis, immunity to error through misidentification, and privileged access. In Brie Gertler (ed.), Privileged Access: Philosophical Accounts of Self-Knowledge. Ashgate.   (Google | Edit)
Bilgrami, Akeel (2005). Self-knowledge, intentionality, and normativity. Iyyun 54 (January):5-24.   (Google | Edit)
Bolton, Derek (1995). Self-knowledge, error, and disorder. In Martin Davies & Tony Stone (eds.), Mental Simulation. Cambridge: Blackwell.   (Cited by 4 | Google | Edit)
Brady, Rob (1981). Verdictives, self-presentation, and self-knowledge. Southern Journal of Philosophy 19:11-20.   (Google | Edit)
Brueckner, Anthony L. (2003). The coherence of scepticism about self-knowledge. Analysis 63 (1):41-48.   (Cited by 4 | Google | Edit)
Burge, Tyler (1999). A century of deflation and a moment about self-knowledge. Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 73 (2):25-46.   (Cited by 2 | Google | Edit)
Burge, Tyler (1996). Our entitlement to self-knowledge. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 96:91-116.   (Cited by 59 | Google | Edit)
Burge, Tyler (2000). Reason and the first person. In C. Wright, B. Smith & C. Macdonald (eds.), Knowing Our Own Minds. Oxford University Press.   (Cited by 33 | Google | Edit)
Byrne, Alex (2005). Introspection. Philosophical Topics 33 (1):79-104.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: I know various contingent truths about my environment by perception. For example, by looking, I know that there is a computer before me; by hearing, I know that someone is talking in the corridor; by tasting, I know that the coffee has no sugar. I know these things because I have some built-in mechanisms specialized for detecting the state of my environment. One of these mechanisms, for instance, is presently transducing electromagnetic radiation (in a narrow band of wavelengths) coming from the computer and the desk on which it sits. How that mechanism works is a complicated story—to put it mildly—and of course much remains unknown. But we can at least produce more-or- less plausible sketches of how the mechanism can start from retinal irradiation, and go on to deliver knowledge of my surroundings. Moreover, in the sort of world we inhabit, specialized detection mechanisms that are causally affected by the things they detect have no serious competition—seeing the computer by seeing an idea of the computer in the divine mind, for example, is not a feasible alternative
Byrne, Alex (online). The puzzle of transparency.   (Google | Edit)
Carruthers, Peter (ms). Cartesian epistemology: Is the theory of the self-transparent mind innate?   (Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: This paper argues that a Cartesian belief in the self-transparency of minds might actually be an innate aspect of our mind-reading faculty. But it acknowledges that some crucial evidence needed to establish this claim hasn’t been looked for or collected. What we require is evidence that a belief in the self-transparency of mind is universal to the human species. The paper closes with a call to anthropologists (and perhaps also developmental psychologists), who are in a position to collect such evidence, encouraging them to do so
Carruthers, Peter (ms). Introspection: Divided and partly eliminated.   (Cited by 1 | Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: This paper will argue that there is no such thing as introspective access to judgments and decisions. It won’t challenge the existence of introspective access to perceptual and imagistic states, nor to emotional feelings and bodily sensations. On the contrary, the model presented in Section 2 presumes such access. Hence introspection is here divided into two categories: introspection of propositional attitude events, on the one hand, and introspection of broadly perceptual events, on the other. I shall assume that the latter exists while arguing that the former doesn’t (or not in the case of judgments and decisions, at least). Section 1 makes some preliminary points and distinctions, and outlines the scope of the argument. Section 2 presents and motivates the general model of introspection that predicts a divided result. Section 3 provides independent evidence for the conclusion that judgments and decisions aren’t introspectable. Section 4 then replies to a number of objections to the argument, the most important of which is made from the perspective of so-called “dual systems theories” of belief formation and decision making. The upshot is a limited form of eliminativism about introspection, in respect of at least two core categories of propositional attitude
Cassam, Quassim (ed.) (1994). Self-Knowledge. Oxford University Press.   (Cited by 25 | Google | Edit)
Cassam, Quassim (1998). Self-knowledge, A Priori knowledge, and the cognitive structure of the mind. In Anthony O'Hear (ed.), Contemporary Issues in the Philosophy of Mind. Cambridge University Press.   (Google | Edit)
Cassam, Quassim (1996). Self-reference, self-knowledge and the problem of misconception. European Journal of Philosophy 4 (3):276-295.   (Google | Edit)
Coliva, Annalisa (2006). Error through misidentification: Some varieties. Journal of Philosophy 103 (8):407-425.   (Cited by 2 | Google | Edit)
Coliva, Annalisa (2003). The first person: Error through misidentification, the split between speaker's and semantic reference, and the real guarantee. Journal of Philosophy 100 (8):416-431.   (Google | Edit)
Coliva, Annalisa (2002). Thought insertion and immunity to error through misidentification. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 9:27-34.   (Cited by 2 | Google | More links | Edit)
Craig, William Lane (1997). Is scepticism about self-knowledge incoherent? Analysis 57 (4):291–295.   (Google | Edit)
Dennett, Daniel C. (2000). The case for rorts. In R.B. Brandom (ed.), Rorty and His Critics. Blackwell.   (Cited by 8 | Google | Edit)
Dewey, John (1918). Concerning alleged immediate knowledge of mind. Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 15 (2):29-35.   (Cited by 3 | Google | More links | Edit)
Dretske, Fred (1994). Introspection. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 94:263-278.   (Cited by 12 | Google | Edit)
Dretske, Fred (2004). Knowing what you think vs. knowing that you think it. In Richard Schantz (ed.), The Externalist Challenge. De Gruyter.   (Cited by 1 | Google | Edit)
Edwards, J. (1999). Interpreted logical forms and knowing your own mind. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 99 (2):169-90.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Fernandez, Jordi (online). Desire and self-knowledge.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: We often form beliefs about our own mental states. I believe that I have political beliefs of a certain kind. Perhaps you believe that you want to eat fish for lunch. Most of us have believed, at some moment or other, that we were in love. Let us call beliefs of this kind ‘self-ascriptions’ of mental states. Self- ascriptions normally enjoy a special kind of epistemic justification when the self-ascribed mental state is of a certain type, such as a belief or a desire. Our justification for self-ascriptions of those mental stases seems to be, in some way, privileged or authoritative. In the philosophical literature, this idea is often expressed by saying that we have privileged access to our own mental states, or that our self-ascriptions constitute self-knowledge. The goal of this discussion will be to account for that fact. I will concentrate on privileged access to our own desires.[ii]
Fricker, Elizabeth (1998). Self-knowledge: Special access vs. artefact of grammar -- a dichotomy rejected. In C. Wright, B. Smith, C. Macdonald & 1998 Self-knowledge: Special access vs. artefact of grammar -- A dichotomy rejected. (eds.), Knowing Our Own Minds. Oxford University Press.   (Cited by 6 | Google | More links | Edit)
Gertler, Brie (2002). Can feminists be cartesians? Dialogue 41 (1):91-112.   (Google | Edit)
Abstract:      I defend one leading strand of Descartes's thought against feminist criticism. I will show that Descartes's “first-person” approach to our knowledge of minds, which has been criticized on feminist grounds, is at least compatible with key feminist views. My argument suggests that this strand of Cartesianism may even bolster some central feminist positions
Gertler, Brie (2003). Introduction to Privileged Access: Philosophical Theories of Self-Knowledge. In Brie Gertler (ed.), Privileged Access: Philosophical Theories of Self-Knowledge. Ashgate.   (Google | Edit)
Gertler, Brie (ed.) (2003). Privileged Access: Philosophical Accounts of Self-Knowledge. Ashgate.   (Cited by 4 | Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: When read as demands for justification, these questions seem absurd. We don’t normally ask people to substantiate assertions like “I think it will rain tomorrow” or “I have a headache”. There is, at the very least, a strong presumption that sincere self-attributions about one’s thoughts and feelings are true. In fact, some philosophers believe that such self-attributions are less susceptible to doubt than any other claims. Even those who reject that extreme view generally acknowledge that there is some salient epistemic difference between (a) one’s belief that she thinks it will rain tomorrow, or that she has a headache, and (b) her belief that it is raining, or that another person has a headache
Gertler, Brie (online). Self-Knowledge. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.   (Cited by 5 | Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: ‘Self-knowledge’ is commonly used in philosophy to refer to knowledge of one's particular mental states, including one's beliefs, desires, and sensations. It is also sometimes used to refer to knowledge about a persisting self -- its ontological nature, identity conditions, or character traits. At least since Descartes, most philosophers have believed that self-knowledge is importantly different from knowledge of the world external to oneself, including others' thoughts. But there is little agreement about what precisely distinguishes self-knowledge from knowledge in other realms. Partially because of this disagreement, philosophers have endorsed competing accounts of how we acquire self-knowledge. These accounts have important consequences for the scope of mental content, for mental ontology, and for personal identity
Gertler, Brie (2000). The mechanics of self-knowledge. Philosophical Topics 28:125-46.   (Cited by 4 | Google | Edit)
Abstract: It is often said that we can know our own thoughts more directly or with more certainty than anyone else can know them. And this disparity is usually taken to be principled, in that we would not be the rational, reflective beings that we are without it. My aim is to trace the consequences of a principled disparity between self-knowledge and other-knowledge for what may be termed the “mechanics ” of self-knowledge . I use a new thought experiment to show that if introspective states are merely causally related to introspected thoughts, the disparity between self-knowledge and other-knowledge is not truly principled. An account of self-knowledge adequate to a truly principled disparity will allow that thought tokens can be
Goldberg, Sandy (1993). An intuition about self-knowledge: A challenge to Fodor. Conference 4 (1):50-63.   (Google | Edit)
Gordon, Jill (2004). Self-knowledge in another woman. In Aeon J. Skoble & Mark T. Conard (eds.), Woody Allen and Philosophy: You Mean My Whole Fallacy Is Wrong? Chicago: Open Court.   (Google | Edit)
Gordon, Robert M. (forthcoming). Ascent routines for propositional attitudes. Synthese.   (Google | Edit)
Abstract: An ascent routine (AR) allows a speaker to self-ascribe a given propositional attitude (PA) by redeploying the process that generates a corresponding lower level utterance. Thus, we may report on our beliefs about the weather by reporting (under certain constraints) on the weather. The chief criticism of my AR account of self-ascription, by Alvin Goldman and others, is that it covers few if any PA’s other than belief and offers no account of how we can attain reliability in identifying our attitude as belief, desire, hope, etc., without presupposing some sort of recognition process. The criticism can be answered, but only by giving up a tacit—and wholly unnecessary—assumption that has influenced discussions of ascent routines. Abandoning the assumption allows a different account of ARs that avoids the criticism and even provides an algorithm for finding a corresponding lower level utterance for any PA. The account I give is supported by research on children’s first uses of a propositional attitude vocabulary
Hacker, P. M. S. (2005). Of knowledge and knowing that someone is in pain. In Alois Pichler & Simo Saatela (eds.), Wittgenstein: The Philosopher and His Works. The Wittgenstein Archives at the University of Bergen.   (Google | Edit)
Abstract: 1. First person authority: the received explanation Over a wide range of psychological attributes, a mature speaker seems to enjoy a defeasible form of authority on how things are with him. The received explanation of this is epistemic, and rests upon a cognitive assumption. The speaker’s word is a authoritative because when things are thus-and-so with him, then normally he knows that they are. This is held to be because the speaker has direct and privileged access to the contents of his consciousness by means of introspection, conceived as a faculty of inner sense. Like perceptual knowledge, introspective knowledge is held to be direct and non-evidential. Accordingly, the first-person utterances ‘I have a pain’, ‘I believe that p’, ‘I intend to V’ are taken to be descriptions of what is evident to inner sense. Many classical thinkers held such subjective knowledge to be not only immediate, but also infallible and indubitable. The challenge to the received conceptions came from Wittgenstein. He denied the cognitive assumption, arguing that it cannot be said of me at all (except perhaps as a joke) that I know that I am in pain. For what is that supposed to mean — except perhaps that I am in pain?1 If it makes no sense to say that one knows that one is in pain, then the epistemic explanation is a non-starter, since it explains the special authoritative status of a person’s avowal of pain by reference to the putative fact that the subject of pain knows, normally knows, or cannot but know, that he is in pain when he is. It is important to note that Wittgenstein did not mechanically generalize the case of pain across the whole domain of firstperson utterances. The case of pain constitutes only one pole of a range of such utterances. Avowals and averrals of belief and intention approximate the other pole, and require independent analysis and grammatical description..
Hintikka, Jaakko (1970). 2.0.CO;2-I');return true;"href='http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0022-362X(19700212)67:3<73:OAO">2.0.CO;2-I'>On attributions of self-knowledge. Journal of Philosophy 67 (February):73-87.   (Cited by 2 | Google | More links | Edit)
Hofmann, Frank (online). The epistemological role of consciousness for introspective self-knowledge.   (Google | Edit)
Abstract: Recently, some philosophers have claimed that consciousness has an important epistemological role to play in the introspective self-ascription of one’s own mental states. This is the thesis of the epistemological role of consciousness for introspective self-knowledge. I will criticize BonJour’s account of the role of consciousness for introspection. He does not provide any reason for believing that conscious states are epistemically better off than non-conscious states. Then I will sketch a representationalist account of how the thesis could be true. Conscious states are available to the subject in a very special way in which non-conscious states are not available. This is the first part of the explanation. The crucial further element in the representationalist account is what I would like to call the ‘introspective mode of mind’. A mind can operate in certain ways or modes – modes of mind. Introspection normally takes place in the introspective mode of mind, judgments about one’s environment in the mode of ‘taking one’s appearances at face value’. And there probably are other modes of mind. The introspective mode of mind is characterized by the special way or framework in which cognitive capacities are employed
Howell, Robert J. (2002). Self-knowledge and self-reference. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research.   (Google | Edit)
Howell, Robert J. (2006). Self-knowledge and self-reference. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 72 (1):44-70.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Hudson, H. (1956). Why we cannot witness or observe what goes on 'in our heads'. Mind 65 (April):218-230.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Jacob, Pierre (ms). Do we know how we know our own minds yet?   (Google | More links | Edit)
Jones, J. R. (1956). Self-knowledge, part I. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 120:120-142.   (Google | Edit)
Jopling, David A. (2000). Self-Knowledge and the Self. Routledge.   (Cited by 11 | Google | More links | Edit)
Kemmerling, Andreas (1999). How self-knowledge can't be naturalized (some remarks on a proposal by dretske). Philosophical Studies 95 (3):311-28.   (Cited by 1 | Google | More links | Edit)
Kornblith, Hilary (1998). What is it like to be me? Australasian Journal of Philosophy 76 (1):48-60.   (Cited by 7 | Google | More links | Edit)
Lawlor, Krista (2004). Reason and the past: The role of rationality in diachronic self-knowledge. Synthese 145 (3):467-495.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Lycan, William G. (1999). Dretske on the mind's awareness of itself. Philosophical Studies 95 (1-2):125-33.   (Cited by 4 | Google | More links | Edit)
Lycan, William G. (2002). Dretske's ways of introspecting. In Brie Gertler (ed.), Privileged Access: Philosophical Accounts of Self-Knowledge. Ashgate.   (Cited by 4 | Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: ‘[I]ntrospection’ is just a convenient word to describe our way of knowing what is going on in our own mind, and anyone convinced that we know—at least sometimes—what is going on in our own mind and therefore, that we have a mind and, therefore, that we are not zombies, must believe that introspection is the answer we are looking for. I, too, believe in introspection
Macdonald, C.; Smith, Peter K. & Wright, C. (1998). Knowing Our Own Minds: Essays in Self-Knowledge. Oxford University Press.   (Cited by 7 | Google | Edit)
MacDonald, Cynthia (2004). Self-knowledge and the first person. In M. Sie, Marc Slors & B. Van den Brink (eds.), Reasons of One's Own. Ashgate.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: Self-Knowledge and the First-Person1 It is a familiar view in the philosophy of mind and action is that for a thought or attitude to constitute a reason for an action is for it to render intelligible, in the light of norms of rationality or reason, that action. However, I can make sense of your actions in this way by crediting you with attitudes that I myself do not hold. Equally, you can do this for my actions. So not all reasons for one’s actions are one’s own reasons. What more is involved in a reason’s being one’s own reason for acting?
Martin, Michael G. F. (1998). An eye directed outward. In C. Wright, B. Smith & C. Macdonald (eds.), Knowing Our Own Minds. Oxford University Press.   (Cited by 11 | Google | Edit)
McDowell, John (1995). Knowledge and the internal. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 55 (4):877-93.   (Cited by 42 | Google | More links | Edit)
McGeer, Victoria (1996). 2.0.CO;2-X');return true;"href='http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0022-362X(199610)93:10<483:I"AEPR>2.0.CO;2-X'>Is "self-knowledge" an empirical problem? Renegotiating the space of philosophical explanation. Journal of Philosophy 93 (10):483-515.   (Cited by 16 | Google | More links | Edit)
McManus, Denis (1995). The epistemology of self-knowledge and the presuppositions of rule-following. The Monist 78 (4):496-514.   (Google | Edit)
Medina, José (2006). What's so special about self-knowledge. Philosophical Studies 129 (3):575-603.   (Google | Edit)
Mellone, S. H. (1901). The nature of self-knowledge. Mind 10 (39):318-335.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Miles, T. R. (1956). Self-knowledge, part II. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 143:143-156.   (Google | Edit)
Millikan, Ruth G. (1993). Knowing what I'm thinking of--I. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 67 (67):91-108.   (Google | Edit)
Moore, Jay (1992). On private events and theoretical terms. Journal of Mind and Behavior 13 (4):329-345.   (Cited by 6 | Google | Edit)
Neisser, U. (1991). Five kinds of self-knowledge. Philosophical Psychology 1:35-59.   (Cited by 166 | Google | Edit)
Newen, Albert & Vosgerau, Gottfried (2007). A representational account of self-knowledge. Erkenntnis 67 (2).   (Google | Edit)
Abstract: Self-knowledge is knowledge of one’s own states (or processes) in an indexical mode of presentation. The philosophical debate is concentrating on mental states (or processes). If we characterize self-knowledge by natural language sentences, the most adequate utterance has a structure like “I know that I am in mental state M”. This common sense characterization has to be developed into an adequate description. In this investigation we will tackle two questions: (i) What precisely is the phenomenon referred to by “self-knowledge” and how can we adequately describe a form of self-knowledge which we might realistically enjoy? (ii) Can we have self-knowledge given the fact that the meaning of some words which we utter depends on the environment or the speech community? The theory we defend argues that we have to distinguish the public meaning of utterances, on the one hand, and the mental representations which are constituting a mental state of an individual, on the other. Self-knowledge should be characterized on the level of mental representations while the semantics of utterances self-attributing mental states should be treated separately. Externalism is only true for the public meaning of utterances but not for beliefs and other mental states including self-knowledge
Nichols, Shaun & Stich, Stephen P. (2003). Reading one's own mind: A cognitive theory of self-awareness. In Quentin Smith & Aleksandar Jokic (eds.), Consciousness: New Philosophical Perspectives. Oxford University Press.   (Cited by 4 | Google | More links | Edit)
Nichols, Shaun (2000). The mind's "I" and the theory of mind's "I": Introspection and two concepts of self. Philosophical Topics 28:171-99.   (Google | Edit)
Abstract: Introspection plays a crucial role in Modern philosophy in two different ways. From the beginnings of Modern philosophy, introspection has been used a tool for philosophical exploration in a variety of thought experiments. But Modern philosophers (e.g., Locke and Hume) also tried to characterize the nature of introspection as a psychological phenomenon. In contemporary philosophy, introspection is still frequently used in thought experiments. And in the analytic tradition, philosophers have tried to characterize conceptually necessary features of introspection.2 But over the last several decades, philosophers have devoted relatively little attention to the cognitive characteristics of introspection. This has begun to change, impelled largely by a fascinating body of work on how children and autistic individuals understand the mind.3 In a pair of recent papers, Stephen Stich and I have drawn on this empirical work to develop an account of introspection or self-awareness.4 In this paper, I will elaborate and defend this cognitive theory of introspection further and argue that if the account is right, it may have important ramifications for psychological and philosophical debates over the self
O'Brien, Lucy (2007). Self-Knowing Agents. Oxford University Press.   (