Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 May 2022
This is a doctrine about the nature of thought or cognition, and some would say that the matters it raises have only fairly recently come to be directly engaged by mainstream philosophers of the analytical tradition. For analytical philosophy’s approach to the question of intentionality has tended to be routed through concern with linguistic behaviour, its interpretation and its logical and semantic analysis. The depth of this concern with language is, if anything, emphasized when we consider more recent attempts by heirs of the analytical tradition to approach the question of intentionality more directly, missing out the trip through linguistic behaviour. According to one very influential version of this tendency, the problem of intentionality is still to do with the properties of linguistic structures, only now not public, spoken linguistic structures, but systems of mental representations in the brain. The tendency to miss out the trip through public language reflects, in part, a reaction against behaviourism and in favour of mentalism: just as one of the principal causes for the longevity of the result of the ‘linguistic turn’ was undoubtedly the influence of behaviourism on analytical philosophy of mind. I think the mentalists are right to be anti-behaviouristic, but that their forerunners were also right to focus on the interpretation of linguistic behaviour when approaching cognition in general and intentionality in particular. By the same token, then, there has usually been something wrong with analytical approaches in this area: too much behaviourism, or too little concern with linguistic behaviour. In this paper I want to recommend a more balanced approach, building on themes from Quine and Davidson.
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