Coping with informational atomism - one of Jerry Fodor’s legacies
Average rating
Cast your vote
You can rate an item by clicking the amount of stars they wish to award to this item.
When enough users have cast their vote on this item, the average rating will also be shown.
Star rating
Your vote was cast
Thank you for your feedback
Thank you for your feedback
Authors
Jacob, PierrePlace of Publication
BariType
Journal articleTitle / Series / Name
Rivista Internazionale di Filosofia e PsicologiaPublication Volume
11Publication Issue
1Date
2020
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Fodor was passionately unwilling to compromise. Of his several commitments, I focus here on informational atomism. Fodor staunchly rejected semantic holism for two conspiring reasons. He took it to threaten his commitment to the nomic character of psychological explanation. He also took it to pave the way towards relativism, which he found deeply offensive. In this paper, I reconstruct the strands of Fodor’s commitment to the computational version of the representational theory of mind that led him to informational atomism. I take issue with three features of informational atomism. First, I argue that it deprives content from its expected causal role in psychological explanation. Secondly, I take issue with Fodor’s claim that only informational atomism can meet the requirements of the principle of compositionality. Finally, I argue that informational atomism yields a bloated or unwieldy category of nomic properties.Publisher link
https://www.rifp.it/ojs/index.php/rifp/article/view/rifp.2020.0002/1008identifiers
http://dx.doi.org/10.4453/rifp.2020.0002ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
http://dx.doi.org/10.4453/rifp.2020.0002
Scopus Count
Collections