Immunity to Error through Misidentification: New Essays
Author(s): Simon Prosser (Editor), François Recanati
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication Date: 5 April 2012
Language: English
Print length: 304 pages
ISBN-10: 0521198305
ISBN-13: 9780521198301
Book Description
Immunity to error through misidentification is recognised as an important feature of certain kinds of first-person judgments, as well as arguably being a feature of other indexical or demonstrative judgments. In this collection of newly commissioned essays, the contributors present a variety of approaches to it, engaging with historical and empirical aspects of the subject as well as contemporary philosophical work. It is the first collection of essays devoted exclusively to the topic and will be essential reading for anyone interested in philosophical work on the self, first-person thought or indexical thought more generally.
Editorial Reviews
Review
‘… highly recommend[ed] … to those interested in this topic, and I consider it essential reading to those who follow and participate in recent discussions in self-knowledge.’ George Lăzăroiu, Review of Contemporary Philosophy
‘This excellent volume offers thirteen new essays on IEM, which collectively attempt to get clearer on the nature and scope of the phenomenon … the volume as a whole stands as an important contribution to scholarship on immunity to error through misidentification and neighbouring philosophical questions. It will no doubt be a major source of ideas and inspiration for future work on these issues.’ Philosophy in Review
Book Description
Devoted exclusively to the topic, this book analyses immunity to error through misidentification as an important feature of personal judgments.
About the Author
Simon Prosser is a lecturer in philosophy at the University of St Andrews. His research involves a variety of issues in the philosophy of mind and in metaphysics.
François Recanati is a senior researcher at the CNRS, Institut Jean-Nicod, and an Arché Professorial Fellow at the University of St Andrews. His recent publications include Truth-Conditional Pragmatics (2010), Perspectival Thought (2007) and Literal Meaning (Cambridge University Press, 2004).