Knowing Other Minds

Knowing Other Minds by Anita Avramides, published by Oxford University Press in 2019, explores the intricate nature of understanding the thoughts and feelings of others. This edition comprises 238 pages and is presented in English. The book features ten original chapters contributed by internationally renowned researchers, addressing fundamental questions that arise from our everyday social interactions. It examines how we acquire knowledge about others’ mental states and the cognitive processes involved in social understanding.
Readers will find a diverse range of perspectives on topics such as the relationship between self-knowledge and knowledge of others, as well as insights drawn from developmental psychology and cognitive science. The chapters delve into whether we can have direct perceptual knowledge of another person’s thoughts and how our social lives intersect with moral values. By bridging philosophical inquiries with empirical findings, Knowing Other Minds opens new avenues for understanding the complexities of human cognition and social interaction.
Official synopsis Publisher
We all take it for granted that we are typically in a position to know about the thoughts and feelings of other people. But we might naturally wonder how we acquire this kind of knowledge. Knowing Other Minds brings together ten original chapters, written by internationally renowned researchers, on questions that arise from our everyday social interaction with others. Can we have direct perceptual knowledge of another person’s thoughts? How do we acquire general conceptions of mental states? What lessons can be drawn from experimental work in developmental psychology? Are there fundamental differences between the ways in which we acquire knowledge of our own minds and the ways in which we acquire knowledge of someone else’s mind? What sort of cognitive processing underlies our everyday social understanding? How should we best think of the relationship between our complex social life and moral value? The chapters in this volume convey a variety of different perspectives and make a number of novel contributions to the existing literature on these questions, thereby opening up new avenues of inquiry. Furthermore, they illustrate how questions in philosophy and questions from empirical cognitive science overlap and mutually inform one another.
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