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2007 Lecture 5: Acquaintance and essence

Series
John Locke Lectures in Philosophy
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Russell held that we must be acquainted with the constituents of the contents of our thoughts, and remnants of this doctrine persist in the work of a number of more recent philosophers.
Our knowledge of our own phenomenal experience is supposed to be a paradigm of acquaintance, but acquaintance is sometimes explained in a way that implies that it involves knowledge of the essential nature of a thing or property.

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John Locke Lectures in Philosophy

2007 Lecture 4: Phenomenal and epistemic indistinguishability

The fourth lecture will begin with a variation on the thought experiment about Mary that is the focus of the knowledge argument, using it to develop the analogy between self-locating knowledge and knowledge of phenomenal experience.
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John Locke Lectures in Philosophy

2007 Lecture 6: Knowing what we are thinking

The sixth lecture will try to resolve a familiar tension between externalism about mental content and the assumption that we have some kind of privileged knowledge of the contents of our own thoughts.
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Episode Information

Series
John Locke Lectures in Philosophy
People
Robert Stalnaker
Keywords
philosophy
john locke
Faculty of Philosophy
oxford
John Locke Lectures
Philosophy Lecture Series
Department: Faculty of Philosophy
Date Added: 10/07/2008
Duration: 01:00:00

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