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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities

Can Consciousness Be Taken Seriously When It Comes To Personal Identity?, Stephen Matthew Duncan Nov 2009

Can Consciousness Be Taken Seriously When It Comes To Personal Identity?, Stephen Matthew Duncan

Philosophy Theses

Certain contemporary philosophers (e.g. Dainton, 2008; Strawson, 1999; Foster, 2008) have thought that the first-person, qualitative aspect of conscious experience should be taken seriously when it comes to our thinking about personal identity through time. These philosophers have thus argued that experiential continuity is essential to a person’s ability to persist identically through time. This is what I will call ‘the phenomenological theory’. In this thesis I describe the phenomenological theory and then discuss three problems that have plagued the history of this theory: the bridge problem, the token problem, and the ontological problem. I will argue that a recent …


Epicurean Friendship: How Are Friends Pleasurable?, Melissa Marie Strahm Jul 2009

Epicurean Friendship: How Are Friends Pleasurable?, Melissa Marie Strahm

Philosophy Theses

Although the Epicurean ethical system is fundamentally egoistic and hedonistic, it attributes a surprisingly significant role to friendship. Even so, I argue that traditional discussions of Epicurean friendship fail to adequately account for the value (or pleasure) of individual friends. In this thesis I present an amended notion of Epicurean friendship that better accounts for all of the pleasure friends afford. However, the success of my project requires rejecting an Epicurean ethical principle. Because of this, I explore textual evidence both in favor and against the amended notion I propose and the problematic ethical principle. After arguing against the problematic …


An Incompatibility Between Intentionalism And Multiple Authorship In Film, Steven Christopher Hager May 2009

An Incompatibility Between Intentionalism And Multiple Authorship In Film, Steven Christopher Hager

Philosophy Theses

The multiple authorship view for film is the claim that multiple authors exist for almost any given film. This view is a recent development in opposition to the longstanding single authorship view which holds that there is only one author for every film, usually the director. One of the most often-cited reasons in support of the multiple authorship claim is that multiple authorship views more successfully explain the following fact about filmmaking better than single authorship views: filmmakers’ intentions sometimes conflict with each other during the production of a film. However, since multiple authorship views cannot adequately explain how a …


The Role Of Afterlife Myths In Plato's Moral Arguments, Daniel William Issler May 2009

The Role Of Afterlife Myths In Plato's Moral Arguments, Daniel William Issler

Philosophy Theses

I will address the issue of Plato’s use of myths concerning the afterlife in the context of the ethical arguments of the Gorgias, Phaedo and Republic, and I will contend that while the arguments in each dialogue are aimed at convincing the rational part of the self, the myths are aimed at persuading the non-rational part of the self. In support of this interpretation, I will examine Plato’s views on the relation between the different parts of the soul and the relationship that poetry and myth have to philosophy. I will argue that Plato’s use of myth is a legitimate …


The Proper Metric Of Justice In Justice As Fairness, Charles Benjamin Carmichael May 2009

The Proper Metric Of Justice In Justice As Fairness, Charles Benjamin Carmichael

Philosophy Theses

I explore the problem of using primary goods as the index for determining the least-advantaged members in a society in Rawls’s theory of justice. I look at the problems presented to Rawls by Amartya Sen and his capabilities approach. I discuss the solutions to Sen’s problems given by Norman Daniels, who argues that primary goods are able to take capabilities into account. Finally, I supplement Daniels, arguing that the parameters Rawls uses to define his theory limit Sen’s objection and that primary goods are the appropriate metric of justice in Rawls’s theory.


The Moral Reality Of War: Defensive Force And Just War Theory, Maj Robert E. Underwood Iii Apr 2009

The Moral Reality Of War: Defensive Force And Just War Theory, Maj Robert E. Underwood Iii

Philosophy Theses

The permissible use of defensive force is a central tenet of the traditional legal and philosophical justification for war and its practice. Just War Theory holds a nation’s right to resist aggressive attack with defensive force as the clearest example of a just cause for war. Just War Theory also stipulates norms for warfare derived from a conception of defensive force asserted to be consistent with the moral reality of war. Recently, these aspects of Just War Theory have been criticized. David Rodin has challenged the status of national defense as an uncontroversial just cause. Jeff McMahan has charged that …


Motivating Emotional Content, Benjamin Sheredos Apr 2009

Motivating Emotional Content, Benjamin Sheredos

Philosophy Theses

Among philosophers of the emotions, it is common to view emotional content as purely descriptive – that is, belief-like or perception-like. I argue that this is a mistake. The intentionality of the emotions cannot be understood in isolation from their motivational character, and emotional content is also inherently directive – that is, desire-like. This view’s strength is its ability to explain a class of emotional behaviors that I argue, the common view fails to explain adequately. I claim that it is already implicit in leading theories of emotion elicitation in cognitive psychology – “appraisal theories.” The result is a deeper …


Defending Noe's Enactive Theory Of Perception, Lucas Allen Keefer Apr 2009

Defending Noe's Enactive Theory Of Perception, Lucas Allen Keefer

Philosophy Theses

Theories of perception can broadly be divided into two groups: orthodox and heterodox theories (Noë & Thompson, 2002). Orthodox theories of perception consider perception as a neurological process, i.e. as a phenomenon which can be explained solely in terms of intracranial facts. Heterodox views expand this scope, maintaining that an understanding of perception must include extracranial facts, or facts about the environment in which a perceiver is situated (ibid.). This thesis will attempt to defend a particular exemplar of this heterodox approach, namely the enactive theory of perception proposed by Alva Noë. The thesis has two primary goals. First, I …


Teleosemantics, Externalism, And The Content Of Theoretical Concepts, Daniel C. Burnston Apr 2009

Teleosemantics, Externalism, And The Content Of Theoretical Concepts, Daniel C. Burnston

Philosophy Theses

In several works, Ruth Millikan (1998a, 2000, 2006) has developed a ‘teleosemantic’ theory of concepts. Millikan’s theory has three explicit desiderata for concepts: wide scope, non-descriptionist content, and naturalism. I contend that Millikan’s theory cannot fulfill all of these desiderata simultaneously. Theoretical concepts, such as those of chemistry and physics, fall under Millikan’s intended scope, but I will argue that her theory cannot account for these concepts in a way that is compatible with both non-descriptionism and naturalism. In these cases, Millikan’s view is subject to the traditional ‘indeterminacy problem’ for teleosemantic theories. This leaves the content of theoretical concepts …


Raz And His Critics: A Defense Of Razian Authority, Jason Thomas Craig Apr 2009

Raz And His Critics: A Defense Of Razian Authority, Jason Thomas Craig

Philosophy Theses

Joseph Raz has developed a concept of authority based on the special relationship between reasons and action. While the view is very complex and subtle, it can be summed up by saying that authorities are authorities insofar as they can mediate between the reasons that happen to bind their subjects and the subjects’ actions. Authorities do this by providing special reasons via directives to their subjects. These special reasons are what Raz calls “protected reasons.” Protected reasons are both first-order reasons for action and second-order “exclusionary reasons” that exclude the subject from considering some reasons in the balance of reasons …


Drug Addiction And Personal Responsibility, Andrew Shawn Reagan Apr 2009

Drug Addiction And Personal Responsibility, Andrew Shawn Reagan

Philosophy Theses

This project examines drug addiction and personal responsibility from the perspective of three different types of theories of addiction: full responsibility, diminished responsibility, and no responsibility. The rational theory of addiction is the fully responsibility theory. The philosophical insights by R. Jay Wallace and George Graham are the diminished responsibility theories. Berridge and Robinson’s Incentive Salience theory of drug addiction is the no responsibility theory examined. My conclusion is that diminished responsibility frameworks are the most suitable in a therapeutic context because they are most sensitive to relevant normative aspects.


Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: Seeking Natural Kinds In A Controversial Diagnosis, Paul Kenneth Pfeilschiefter Apr 2009

Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: Seeking Natural Kinds In A Controversial Diagnosis, Paul Kenneth Pfeilschiefter

Philosophy Theses

Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a debilitating condition that results from the experience of a traumatic event. Natural kinds are mind-independent entities found in nature and are the objects of scientific inquiry. It is common to deny that PTSD is a natural kind, but extant denials assume a thesis of natural kinds that can be called “essentialism”. According to essentialism, many entities are not natural kinds that one would expect should be natural kinds. The homeostatic cluster view of natural kinds offers an alternative that accommodates these cases, including, superficially, the claim that PTSD is a natural kind. I introduce …