Processes, acts, and experiences: Three stances on the problem of intentionality

被引:69
作者
Shaw, R [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Connecticut, Ctr Ecol Study Percept & Act, Storrs, CT 06269 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1207/S15326969ECO1304_02
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The concept of intentionality addresses "aboutness," how one thing can be about, or refer to, some other thing. The argument I present in this article is that intentionality is an essential ecological concept that depends equally on process (the domain of physics), act (the domain of biology), and experience (the domain of psychology). The meaning of intentionality does not reside in any 1 of these realms, but rests Simultaneously on all 3. A case is made for intentionality being rooted in a ubiquitous cosmological scheme that underwrites all systems no less than does the universal causality scheme.
引用
收藏
页码:275 / 314
页数:40
相关论文
共 39 条
[1]   The province of functional psychology [J].
Angell, JR .
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW, 1907, 14 (02) :61-91
[2]  
[Anonymous], MODES PERCEIVING PRO
[3]  
[Anonymous], 1959, Philosophical Investigations. 3rd Printing
[4]  
Brentano F., 1973, PSYCHOL EMPIRICAL ST
[5]  
CHISHOLM R, 1967, ENCY PHILOS
[6]   TIME AND THE OBSERVER - THE WHERE AND WHEN OF CONSCIOUSNESS IN THE BRAIN [J].
DENNETT, DC ;
KINSBOURNE, M .
BEHAVIORAL AND BRAIN SCIENCES, 1992, 15 (02) :183-201
[7]  
Dewey J., 1896, PSYCHOL REV, V3, P357, DOI [10.1037/h0070405, DOI 10.1037/H0070405]
[8]  
DEWEY J, 1999, RECONSTRUCTION PHILO
[9]  
Feynman Richard P., 2010, Quantum Mechanics and Path Integrals
[10]  
Gibson J. J., 1979, ECOLOGICAL APPROACH