Volume 14 (2022): Edition 66 (December 2022) Special Edition: Varieties of Context-Sensitivity in a Pluri-Propositionalist Reflexive Semantic Framework
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Volume 13 (2021): Edition 63 (December 2021) Special Edition on Nothing to Come by Correia & Rosenkranz
Volume 13 (2021): Edition 62 (December 2021) Ethics and Aesthetics: Editions at Their Intersection
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Volume 12 (2020): Edition 59 (December 2020)
Volume 12 (2020): Edition 58 (December 2020) SPECIAL ISSUE: ON THE VERY IDEA OF LOGICAL FORM
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Volume 11 (2019): Edition 55 (December 2019) Special Edition: Chalmers on Virtual Reality
Volume 11 (2019): Edition 54 (December 2019) Special Edition: III Blasco Disputatio, Singular terms in fiction. Fictional and “real” names
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Volume 10 (2018): Edition 51 (December 2018) SYMPOSIUM ON JASON STANLEY’S “HOW PROPAGANDA WORKS”
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Volume 5 (2013): Edition 36 (October 2013) Book symposium on François Recanati’s Mental Files
Volume 5 (2013): Edition 35 (May 2013)
Volume 4 (2012): Edition 34 (December 2012)
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Volume 4 (2012): Edition 32 (May 2012) New Perspectives on Quine’s “Word and Object”
Volume 4 (2011): Edition 31 (November 2011)
Volume 4 (2011): Edition 30 (May 2011) XII Taller d'Investigació en Filosofia
Volume 4 (2010): Edition 29 (November 2010) Petrus Hispanus 2009
Volume 3 (2010): Edition 28 (May 2010)
Volume 3 (2009): Edition 27 (November 2009) Homage to M. S. Lourenço
Volume 3 (2009): Edition 26 (May 2009)
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Volume 2 (2008): Edition 24 (May 2008)
Volume 2 (2007): Edition 23 (November 2007) Normativity and Rationality
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Volume 1 (2006): Edition 20 (May 2006)
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Volume 1 (1998): Edition 5-1 (June 1998) Special Edition: Language, Logic and Mind Forum, Guest Editors: Joao Branquinho; M. S. Lourenço
Volume 1 (1998): Edition 5-2 (November 1998) Special Edition: Petrus Hispanus Lectures 1998: o Mental e o Físico, Guest Editors: Joao Branquinho; M. S. Lourenço
Many scholars have argued that history embodies a different form of explanation from natural science. This paper provides an analysis of narrative conceived as the form of explanation appropriate to history. In narratives, actions, beliefs, and pro-attitudes are joined to one another by means of conditional and volitional connections. Conditional connections exist when beliefs and pro-attitudes pick up themes contained in one another. Volitional connections exist when agents command themselves to do something having decided to do it because of a pro-attitude they hold. The fear remains, however, that all narratives are constructed in part by the imagination of the writer, so if the human sciences deploy narratives, they lack proper epistemic legitimacy. The paper dispels this fear by arguing that we have proper epistemic grounds for postulating conditional and volitional connections because these connections are given to us by a folk psychology we accept as true.
Many scholars have argued that history embodies a different form of explanation from natural science. This paper provides an analysis of narrative conceived as the form of explanation appropriate to history. In narratives, actions, beliefs, and pro-attitudes are joined to one another by means of conditional and volitional connections. Conditional connections exist when beliefs and pro-attitudes pick up themes contained in one another. Volitional connections exist when agents command themselves to do something having decided to do it because of a pro-attitude they hold. The fear remains, however, that all narratives are constructed in part by the imagination of the writer, so if the human sciences deploy narratives, they lack proper epistemic legitimacy. The paper dispels this fear by arguing that we have proper epistemic grounds for postulating conditional and volitional connections because these connections are given to us by a folk psychology we accept as true.