Self-knowledge and self-deception : : the role of transparency in first personal knowledge. / / Christoph Michel.

Self-knowledge and self-deception present fundamental problems and puzzles to philosophy of mind. In this book accounts of both phenomena are systematically developed and defended against classical and recent views. The proposed 'cognitive ascent model' offers an explanation of the intuiti...

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Place / Publishing House:Paderborn : : Mentis Verlag,, [2014]
©2014
Year of Publication:2014
Language:English
Physical Description:1 online resource (310 pages ); illustrations ;
Notes:Dissertation.
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Summary:Self-knowledge and self-deception present fundamental problems and puzzles to philosophy of mind. In this book accounts of both phenomena are systematically developed and defended against classical and recent views. The proposed 'cognitive ascent model' offers an explanation of the intuitive peculiarity of self-knowledge as well as of the reach and limits of our epistemic privilege. The model builds on a general transparency principle for attitudes. Transparency can be the key to a genuinely first-personal knowledge of attitudes to the extent that someone’s having a certain attitude is to be identified with his attributing a value property to an intentional object. The offered view rejects the strategies of inner sense, parallelism and constitutivism. Paradigmatic self-deception, rather than being a failure of recognizing one’s own mental states is a failure at the level of metacognitive control over belief-formation. Self-deceptive beliefs are formed or maintained against criterial evidence via pseudo-rational adaptations in belief-systems.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:3897858363
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: Christoph Michel.