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TY - UNPB
ID - cogprints1450
UR - http://cogprints.org/1450/
A1 - O�Brien, Gerard
Y1 - 1993///
N2 - Stich begins his paper "What is a Theory of Mental Representation?" (1992) by noting that while
there is a dizzying range of theories of mental representation in today's philosophical market
place, there is very little self-conscious reflection about what a theory of mental representation is
supposed to do. This is quite remarkable, he thinks, because if we bother to engage in such
reflection, some very surprising conclusions begin to emerge. The most surprising conclusion of
all, according to Stich, is that most of the philosophers in this field are undertaking work that is
quite futile:
It is my contention that most of the players in this very crowded field have no coherent project
that could possibly be pursued successfully with the methods they are using. (p.244)
Stich readily admits that this is a startling conclusion; so startling, he thinks, that some may even
take it as an indication that he has simply "failed to figure out what those who are searching for
a theory of mental representation are up to" (p.244). But it is a conclusion that he is willing to
stand by, and he sets about it defending it in the body of his paper.
Stich, I think, is right about this�I do take his conclusion to indicate that he has failed to
figure out what those who are searching for a theory of mental representation are up to. And he
has failed to do this largely because he has failed to distinguish between the theory of mind that is
implicit in our folk psychology and the mental mechanism that is responsible for our capacity to
make folk psychological judgements. When this conflation is undone, so too is the reasoning that
takes Stich to his startling conclusion. This is not to say that the conclusion itself is clearly false; it
is merely to say that Stich has failed to show that it is true.
In what follows I will defend this analysis of Stich's self-conscious reflections on what a
theory of mental representation is supposed to do. I will begin with a very brief exposition of
Stich's survey of the logical terrain in this part of the philosophical landscape and the line of
reasoning that subsequently delivers up the aforementioned conclusion. I will then go on to
argue that the latter line of reasoning is fundamentally misdirected because of an error in the
former survey.
PB - Research School of Social Sciences
KW - mental representation
KW - folk psychology
KW - philosophy of mind
KW - explaining versus describing intentional properties of mental states
TI - A Conflation of Folk Psychologies: A Commentary on Stich's �What is a Theory of Mental Representation?�
SP - 42
AV - public
EP - 51
ER -