The Importance of Being Understood: Folk Psychology as Ethics

L8ndon: Routledge (2002)
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Abstract

I discussed the ways in which folk psychology is influenced by the need for small-scale cooperation between people. I argue that considerations about cooperation and mutual benefit can be found in the everyday concepts of belief, desire, and motivation. I describe what I call "solution thinking", where a person anticipates another person's actions by first determining the solution to the cooperative problem that the person faces and then reasoning backwards to a prediction of individual action.

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Adam Morton
PhD: Princeton University; Last affiliation: University of British Columbia

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