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Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2013

Pages: 289-299

ISBN (Hardback): 9789400754188

Full citation:

Andrew Winters, Alex Levine, "Not so exceptional", in: Origins of mind, Berlin, Springer, 2013

Not so exceptional

away from chomskian saltationism and towards a naturally gradual account of mindfulness

Andrew Winters

Alex Levine

pp. 289-299

in: Liz Swan (ed), Origins of mind, Berlin, Springer, 2013

Abstract

It is argued that a chief obstacle to a naturalistic explanation of the origins of mind is human exceptionalism, as exemplified in the seventeenth century by René Descartes and in the twentieth century by Noam Chomsky. As an antidote to human exceptionalism, we turn to the account of aesthetic judgment in Charles Darwin"s Descent of Man, according to which the mental capacities of humans differ from those of lower animals only in degree, and not in kind. Thoroughgoing naturalistic explanation of these capacities is made easier by shifting away from the substance-metaphysical implications of the search for an account of mind, toward a dispositional account of the origins of mindfulness.

Cited authors

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2013

Pages: 289-299

ISBN (Hardback): 9789400754188

Full citation:

Andrew Winters, Alex Levine, "Not so exceptional", in: Origins of mind, Berlin, Springer, 2013