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![]() Philosophy and Phenomenological ResearchVolume 73 Issue 2, Pages 290 - 315 Published Online: 1 Aug 2007 Journal compilation © 2010 Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, LLC
Abstract | References | Full Text: PDF (Size: 1564K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Davidson's Transcendental Externalism Copyright 2006 International Phenomenological Society ABSTRACTOne of the chief aims of Donald Davidson's later work was to show that participation in a certain causal nexus involving two creatures and a shared environment–Davidson calls this nexus "triangulation"–is a metaphysically necessary condition for the acquisition of thought. This doctrine, I suggest, is aptly regarded as a form of what I call transcendental externalism. I extract two arguments for the transcendental-externalist doctrine from Davidson's writings, and argue that neither succeeds. A central interpretive claim is that the arguments are primarily funded by a particular conception of the nature of non-human animal life. This conception turns out to be insupportable. The failure of Davidson's arguments presses the question of whether we could ever hope to arrive at far-reaching claims about the conditions for thought if we deny, as does Davidson, the legitimacy of the naturalistic project in the philosophy of mind. |
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