
Process, Action, and Experience
Rowland Stout(Editor)
Oxford University Press
Published on 8. March 2018
Book
Hardback
240 pages
978-0-19-877799-1 (ISBN)
Description
There has been a philosophical upheaval recently in our understanding of the metaphysics of the mind. The philosophy of mind and action has traditionally treated its subject matter as consisting of states and events, and completely ignored the category of ongoing process. So the mental things that happen - experiences and actions - have been taken to be completed events and not ongoing processes. But events by their very nature as completed wholes are never present to the agent or subject; only ongoing processes can be present to a subject in the way required for conscious experience and practical self-knowledge. This suggests that a proper understanding of processes is required to understand subjective experience and agency.
This volume explores the possibility and advantages of taking processes to be the subject matter of the philosophy of mind and action. The central defining feature of the process argument is its use of the progressive (as opposed to perfective) aspect. But beyond this, philosophers working on the metaphysics of processes do not agree. The contributors to this volume take up this argument in the metaphysics of processes. Are processes continuants? Are they particulars at all, or should we rather be thinking of process activity as a kind of stuff? Process, Action, and Experience considers whether practical reasoning and practical self-knowledge require thinking of action in process terms, and it considers arguments for the processive nature of conscious experience.
This volume explores the possibility and advantages of taking processes to be the subject matter of the philosophy of mind and action. The central defining feature of the process argument is its use of the progressive (as opposed to perfective) aspect. But beyond this, philosophers working on the metaphysics of processes do not agree. The contributors to this volume take up this argument in the metaphysics of processes. Are processes continuants? Are they particulars at all, or should we rather be thinking of process activity as a kind of stuff? Process, Action, and Experience considers whether practical reasoning and practical self-knowledge require thinking of action in process terms, and it considers arguments for the processive nature of conscious experience.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 242 mm
Width: 164 mm
Thickness: 22 mm
Weight
524 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-877799-1 (9780198777991)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Rowland Stout
Process, Action, and Experience
E-Book
03/2018
1st Edition
OUP eBook
€50.49
Available for download

Rowland Stout
Process, Action, and Experience
E-Book
02/2018
1st Edition
OUP eBook
€50.49
Available for download
Person
Rowland Stout is Professor of Philosophy at University College Dublin and is the author of Things that happen because they should (OUP 1996), Action (Acumen 2005), and The Inner Life of a Rational Agent (Edinburgh University Press 2006)
Content
1: Rowland Stout: Introduction: Process, Action and Experience 2: David Charles: Processes, Activities and Actions 3: Antony Galton: Processes as Patterns of Occurrence 4: Thomas Crowther: Processes as Continuants and Process as Stuff 5: Matthew Soteriou: Experience, Process, Continuity and Boundary 6: Helen Steward: Occurrent States 7: Johanna Seibt: What is a Process? - Modes of Occurrence and Forms of Dynamicity in General Process Theory 8: Christopher Mole: The Process of Inference 9: Anton Ford: The Progress of the Deed 10: Benj Hellie: Praxeology, Imperatives, and Shifts of View 11: Rowland Stout: Ballistic Action