Entries by Colin McGinn

A Puzzle about Desire (and Intention etc.)

A Puzzle about Desire (and Intention etc.) In “A Puzzle about Belief” Kripke introduces his puzzle about belief as a puzzle about belief—specifically, the behavior of names in belief contexts. I will contend that it is a not a puzzle about belief specifically and not about names specifically; that is just one version of the […]

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Parasites and Disgust

Parasites and Disgust What is the evolutionary origin of the emotion of disgust, along with its behavioral expression? Why was it selected? I will suggest that parasites played a vital role.[1] A desideratum of any theory is to distinguish disgust from two other emotions easily confused with it: fear and aesthetic revulsion. Fear is much […]

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Life: A Synthesis

Life: A Synthesis I am going to attempt something both ambitious and modest: synthesize the various elements of the Dawkinsian view of life as we know it. We are familiar (I hope) with the pillars of the Dawkins’ world-view (zoological philosophy): the selfish gene, the extended phenotype, the genetic book of the dead (the textual […]

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Economics and Ethics

Economics and Ethics Economics is the domain of the selfish. Ethics is the domain of the selfless. So we have been schooled to think. In economic activity (exchange, purchase) we acquire goods: we benefit from what we receive; we get what we want. The act is essentially selfish—self-interested, even greedy. Ethics doesn’t come into it, […]

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Archival Minds

Archival Minds Richard Dawkins’ The Genetic Book of the Dead (2024) advances the thesis that an organism’s body is like a book describing ancestral environments. The genes encode facts about how the world was when the organism containing them evolved. We can thus infer the past state of things from the current state of an […]

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On Cancelling

On Cancelling Here is a thought experiment for you. Suppose your top ten philosophers had all been cancelled: removed from pedagogical employment, prevented from publishing, and generally shunned. This possibility could cover the philosophers of the last hundred years or of all time. Suppose that their thoughts had therefore never seen the light of day. […]

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On Writing

On Writing When I was a professor of philosophy working in a philosophy department, I used to jot down notes on ideas I had that seemed promising. I was too busy to write up the ideas properly, so I made the notes as reminders for later work. The exigencies of teaching had priority (a great […]

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Correlational Semantics

Correlational Semantics I will describe some possible uses of correlational semantics. I don’t say I subscribe to these uses; I offer them as a gift to those with anti-realist or fictionalist yearnings in certain areas.  It may help ease some discomfort caused by such yearnings. Let’s begin with a relatively simple case: feature-placing sentences like […]

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