
Understanding "I"
Language and Thought
Jose Luis Bermudez(Author)
Oxford University Press
Published on 26. January 2017
Book
Hardback
176 pages
978-0-19-879621-3 (ISBN)
Description
No words in English are shorter than "I" and few, if any, play a more fundamental role in language and thought. In Understanding "I": Thought and Language Jose Luis Bermudez continues his longstanding work on the self and self-consciousness. Bermudez develops a model of how language-users understand sentences involving the first person pronoun "I". This model illuminates the unique psychological role that self-conscious thoughts (typically expressed using "I") play in action and thought - a unique role often summarized by describing "I" as an essential indexical.
The book opens with an argument directly supporting the indispensability of "I"-thoughts in explaining action. After motivating a broadly Fregean approach linguistic understanding it critically examines Frege's own remarks on "I" as well as the Fregean account offered by Gareth Evans. The main part of the book develops an account of the sense of "I" that explains a cluster of related phenomena, including essential indexicality, immunity to error through misidentification, the shareability of "I"-thoughts, the relation between "I" and "you", and the role of autobiographical memory in self-consciousness.
The book opens with an argument directly supporting the indispensability of "I"-thoughts in explaining action. After motivating a broadly Fregean approach linguistic understanding it critically examines Frege's own remarks on "I" as well as the Fregean account offered by Gareth Evans. The main part of the book develops an account of the sense of "I" that explains a cluster of related phenomena, including essential indexicality, immunity to error through misidentification, the shareability of "I"-thoughts, the relation between "I" and "you", and the role of autobiographical memory in self-consciousness.
Reviews / Votes
Jose Bermudez's book is a welcome effort ... the book is an ambitious, original, and instructive effort to defend the philosophical significance of the first-person perspective * Herman Cappelen, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews *More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Dimensions
Height: 211 mm
Width: 146 mm
Thickness: 17 mm
Weight
311 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-879621-3 (9780198796213)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
02/2017
1st Edition
OUP eBook
€24.99
Available for download

E-Book
02/2017
1st Edition
OUP eBook
€18.99
Available for download
Person
Educated at St Pauls School, London and King's College Cambridge, Jose Luis Bermudez is Professor of Philosophy at Texas A&M University, where he previous served as Dean of the College of Liberal Arts. He has held positions at the universities of Cambridge and Stirling, as well as at Washington University in St Louis. His books include The Paradox of Self-Consciousness, Thinking Without Words, Philosophy of Psychology, A Contemporary Introduction, Decision Theory and Rationality, and Cognitive Science: An Introduction to the Sciences of the Mind.
Content
1: "I": An essential indexical 2: Sense and understanding 3: Frege and Evans on the sense of "I" 4: Privacy, objectivity, symmetry 5: Token-sense and type-sense 6: "I": Token-sense and type-sense 7: Explaining immunity to error through misidentification