
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati
Collège de France
La chaire Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit héberge l'enseignement du titulaire, le Pr Recanati, ainsi que les colloques, séminaires et journées d'étude de la chaire, et les conférences des professeurs invités. Les domaines couverts par cet enseignement et ces manifestations relèvent de la philosophie analytique, et plus spécifiquement des deux sous-disciplines mentionnées dans l'intitulé de la chaire : la philosophie du langage et la philosophie de l'esprit, la première entretenant des liens étroits avec la linguistique contemporaine, et la seconde avec les sciences cognitives.
Tous les épisodes
Meilleurs épisodes
Top 10 des épisodes de Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati
Goodpods a dressé une liste des 10 meilleurs épisodes de Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati, classés en fonction du nombre d'écoutes et de likes que chaque épisode a recueillis auprès de nos auditeurs. Si vous écoutez Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati pour la première fois, il n'y a pas de meilleur endroit pour commencer que l'un de ces épisodes exceptionnels. Si vous êtes fan de l'émission, votez pour votre épisode de Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati préféré en ajoutant vos commentaires sur la page de l'épisode.

Colloque - The Limits of Fiction : Genetic Game Criticism - Uncovering Fictional Truths through Unauthorized Use
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati
11/29/24 • 28 min
François Recanati
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit
Collège de France
Année 2024-2025
Colloque - The Limits of Fiction
Genetic Game Criticism - Uncovering Fictional Truths through Unauthorized Use
Intervenant(s) :
Nele Van de Mosselaer
Tilburg University

Colloque - The Limits of Fiction : Fiction and Non-fiction: The Borderlands
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati
11/29/24 • 38 min
François Recanati
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit
Collège de France
Année 2024-2025
Colloque - The Limits of Fiction
Fiction and Non-fiction: The Borderlands
Intervenant(s) :
Stacie Friend
Birkbeck, University of London

Colloque - The Limits of Fiction : Silly Questions
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati
11/29/24 • 28 min
François Recanati
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit
Collège de France
Année 2024-2025
Colloque - The Limits of Fiction
Silly Questions
Intervenant(s) :
Richard Woodward
Humboldt Universität Berlin

Colloque - The Limits of Fiction : Fictional Periphery and the Status of Nondiegetic Music and Extradiegetic Narrators
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati
11/29/24 • 25 min
François Recanati
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit
Collège de France
Année 2024-2025
Colloque - The Limits of Fiction
Fictional Periphery and the Status of Nondiegetic Music and Extradiegetic Narrators
Intervenant(s) :
Mario Slugan
Queen Mary University of London

Colloque - The Limits of Fiction : A New "Quasi" Solution to the Paradox of Fiction
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati
11/29/24 • 27 min
François Recanati
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit
Collège de France
Année 2024-2025
Colloque - The Limits of Fiction
A New "Quasi" Solution to the Paradox of Fiction
Intervenant(s) :
Louis Rouillé
FNRS/ULiège

Colloque - The Limits of Fiction : Do Inaccuracies Matter in Fiction?
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati
11/29/24 • 29 min
François Recanati
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit
Collège de France
Année 2024-2025
Colloque - The Limits of Fiction
Do Inaccuracies Matter in Fiction?
Intervenant(s) :
Irene Romero Suarez
Birkbeck College

Colloque - The Limits of Fiction : Fiction as Non-Assertive Communication
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati
11/28/24 • 26 min
François Recanati
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit
Collège de France
Année 2024-2025
Colloque - The Limits of Fiction
Fiction as Non-Assertive Communication
Intervenant(s) :
Elisa Paganini
University of Milan

Colloque - The Limits of Fiction : Lower-Level and Higher-Level Resistance: Towards a Unified Account of Imaginative Resistance
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati
11/28/24 • 25 min
François Recanati
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit
Collège de France
Année 2024-2025
Colloque - The Limits of Fiction
Lower-Level and Higher-Level Resistance: Towards a Unified Account of Imaginative Resistance
Intervenant(s) :
Irene Lonigro
University of Milan 'La Statale'

Colloque - The Limits of Fiction : "Fictive Stance" vs. Mere Pretense Views of Fictionality: Explanatory Virtues
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati
11/28/24 • 31 min
François Recanati
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit
Collège de France
Année 2024-2025
Colloque - The Limits of Fiction : "Fictive Stance" vs. Mere Pretense Views of Fictionality: Explanatory Virtues
Intervenant(s) :
Manuel García-Carpintero
Universitat de Barcelona

Colloque - Indexical Dynamics : Now and Then: The Dynamics of Self-Locating Beliefs
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati
06/25/24 • 41 min
François Recanati
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit
Collège de France
Année 2023-2024
Colloque - Indexical Dynamics : Now and Then: The Dynamics of Self-Locating Beliefs
Colloque organisé par François Recanati, Professeur du Collège de France, chaire Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit
Intervenant(s)
Matheus Valente, University of Barcelona (LOGOS) & University of Valencia
It's often said within epistemology circles that self-locating beliefs about now and then change in peculiar ways incompatible with traditional Bayesian update rules, and so, that these beliefs are epistemically exceptional. The point is clear enough when we consider subjects who lose track of time - e.g. Rip van Winkle (Kaplan 1989) - and even clearer when some funny business with their memories are added to the equation, as in the famous story of Sleeping Beauty (Elga 2000). But that's like killing a fly with a bulldozer, after all, the dynamics of self-locating beliefs seems exceptional even when attention is restricted to idealised agents that are assumed to never forget any information nor to lose track of time. Such is the case of Chronos, an omniscient god in a deterministic world who not only knows the complete history of her universe but is never uncertain about what time it is. Since Chronos is de dicto omniscient, her beliefs are always entirely concentrated on one possible world. Since she's self-locating omniscient, her self-locating beliefs are, at any given time, concentrated on a single temporal location. Though Chronos is never uncertain about anything, it appears that she must be constantly shifting her self-locating beliefs just to keep up with time: when the present time is n, she believes 'now is n', a moment later when it's n+1, she instead believes 'now is n+1' etc. To use Evans' (1982) metaphor, self-locating beliefs seem to require us to run to keep still. Call the peculiar type of dynamics that even omniscient gods must subject their self-locating beliefs to Shifting (Arntzenius 2003; Bradley (2011) calls it 'Belief Mutation'; Recanati (2016) calls it 'conversion').
To account for Shifting we need to explain why Chronos knows at n that she'll believe 'now is n+1' at n+1 but still refrains from presently believing it. In other words, we need to explain why self- locating beliefs violate van Frassen's (1984) Reflection Principle which holds that we ought to defer to our future selves as experts (under the assumption that their epistemic standing is at least as good as our current one). One way to do so favoured by the majority of epistemologist is to countenance tensed propositions whose truth-values change with time (Titelbaum 2013, p. 171-278). Another way is to hold that the passage of time changes what times/events subjects are acquainted with, which then changes which de re beliefs they can hold at each time. The first camp holds that self-locating beliefs are epistemically special because their truth is tensed. The second camp holds that they so are because their accessibility is tensed. Given how easily this argument seems to roll off the tongue, one wonders whether the last decade of debates with sceptics like Cappelen & Dever (2013) and Magidor (2015) would have taken a different shape if more focus had been given to self-locating beliefs involving instead of to de se beliefs involving 'I'.
But there's an issue. Some epistemologists hold that Shifting is a particularly type of sterile belief update: when the only change in a subject's belief across times is due to Shifting, it's never rational for that subject to revise her de dicto beliefs. As Titelbaum (2013, 233) remarks, it's intuitive that "finding oneself passing through the world in exactly the way one was certain one was going to shouldn't change one's opinions about what that world is like". This suggests a different view where Shifting is not taken to be a type of belief change but instead of belief retention, a view which Prosser (2005) calls 'the
Frege-Evans dynamic theory'. On that approach, Chronos never changes any of her beliefs, and the permutations of indexicals which arise in virtue of the passage of time - now 'now', then 'then' - are really just ways of expressing a single persisting dynamic belief. If the Frege-Evans dynamic theory is tenable, we'd lose one important reason to think that self-locating beliefs are epistemically exceptional. This is so because, as I'll argue, the only puzzling cases that they would still give rise to would be ones where subjects' epistemic states become deteriorated across time due to cognitive mishaps like failures of memory or of one's tracking/discriminatory capacities. Since nobody doubts that weird things happen when our cognitive powers deteriorate, the problem of cognitive dynamics turns out to pertain less about self-locating beliefs per se than about the unsurprising fact that cognitively deteriorated subje...
Afficher plus de meilleurs épisodes

Afficher plus de meilleurs épisodes
FAQ
Combien d'épisodes Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati a-t-il ?
Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati currently has 109 episodes available.
Quels sujets Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati couvre-t-il ?
The podcast is about Society & Culture, Podcasts and Philosophy.
Quel est l'épisode le plus populaire sur Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati ?
The episode title '06 - La structure des contenus mentaux : Force et contenu' is the most popular.
Quelle est la durée moyenne des épisodes sur Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati ?
The average episode length on Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati is 60 minutes.
À quelle fréquence les épisodes de Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati sont-ils publiés ?
Episodes of Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati are typically released every 23 hours.
Quand le premier épisode de Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati a-t-il été diffusé ?
The first episode of Philosophie du langage et de l'esprit - François Recanati was released on Dec 12, 2019.
Afficher plus de FAQ

Afficher plus de FAQ