FI:VV030 Philosophy of the Mind - Course Information
VV030 Philosophy and Theories of the Mind
Faculty of InformaticsAutumn 2010
- Extent and Intensity
- 2/0. 2 credit(s) (plus extra credits for completion). Recommended Type of Completion: z (credit). Other types of completion: k (colloquium).
- Teacher(s)
- prof. PhDr. Ing. Miloslav Dokulil, DrSc. (lecturer)
- Guaranteed by
- prof. Ing. Václav Přenosil, CSc.
Department of Machine Learning and Data Processing – Faculty of Informatics
Contact Person: prof. PhDr. Ing. Miloslav Dokulil, DrSc. - Timetable
- Wed 14:00–15:50 B204
- Prerequisites
- It is advisory to follow courses VB007-VB008 first (or, at least, BV008); but it is not a necessary precondition.
- Course Enrolment Limitations
- The course is also offered to the students of the fields other than those the course is directly associated with.
- fields of study / plans the course is directly associated with
- there are 38 fields of study the course is directly associated with, display
- Course objectives
- As a starting point serves here the heritage of Descartes, but the gravity of this exposition can be found in the mind-body problem in the form relevant in the last twenty five years of development.
- Syllabus
- Overture to the problem: metaphysical dualism (Descartes). Is man without "soul" a machine only? (La Mettrie.) Reaction on the relativist scepticism concerning the extraordinariness of human life in between of other living organisms (vitalism, teleology). Functionalism as a "modern" response to the problem of the status of the mind as a mediium elaborating information. (Fodor, et al.)
- How neurons communicate. Also treating the possibility for man of being only a "vehicle" for the transportation of genetic information (Dawkins).
- Can we aspire to overcome solipsism? (Berkeley.) Is not all thinking only a "rather complicated" reaction to external stimuli? (From Pavlov to Skinner.)
- Intentionality (its Dennett version). Can we speak about the "specificity" of the human mind? (Is it given by "consciousness"? Searle's solution of the problem. Chalmers' idea of a "fundamental theory". Calvin's "cerebral symphony" and his "cerebral code"). Is there anything exclusive in man at all? (Popper's "World 3". Crick's message about his looking for a soul. Churchland's neuron computerization as a representation of our social world. Penrose's metaphor about the "Emperor's New Clothes".) About memetics, too.
- Literature
- Literature (books, etc.) is being assigned during the lectures.
- Teaching methods
- Successive explanation based on the curriculum (slides, texts to be accessed electronically); the lesson is usually introduced by some updating (news illustrating interesting cases, etc., and anniversaries of important classics in the field).
- Assessment methods
- 2 credits after both regularly attending the classes and submitting 1 essay; 3 credits after both regularly attending the classes, submitting 2 essays and a group discussion about the themes of those essays (2 to 3 students each time)
- Language of instruction
- Czech
- Further comments (probably available only in Czech)
- Study Materials
The course is taught once in two years.
- Enrolment Statistics (Autumn 2010, recent)
- Permalink: https://is.muni.cz/course/fi/autumn2010/VV030