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Theories of Intentionality

Theories of intentionality try to explain, ideally in naturalistic terms, how mental states come to be about anything.

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Definition

A theory of intentionality is an account of the conditions under which a mental state has the content it has, that is, of what relation a state must bear to the world for it to represent one thing rather than another.

Scope

This topic covers the main accounts of mental content: informational and causal-covariation theories, teleosemantics, asymmetric-dependence theory, and the challenges of misrepresentation and the disjunction problem that any such theory must solve.

Core questions

  • What relation makes a mental state represent its object?
  • How can a naturalistic theory allow for misrepresentation?
  • Does content derive from information, biological function, or asymmetric dependence?
  • Can intentionality be reduced to non-intentional facts at all?

Key concepts

  • informational semantics
  • teleosemantics
  • asymmetric dependence
  • misrepresentation
  • disjunction problem
  • indicator function

Key theories

Informational semantics
A state's content is fixed by the information it reliably carries about the world under suitable conditions.
Teleosemantics
Content is fixed by the biological function a representational system was selected to perform, allowing misrepresentation when the system malfunctions.
Asymmetric-dependence theory
A symbol means X when X-caused tokenings are what non-X-caused tokenings asymmetrically depend on, solving the disjunction problem for causal theories.

History

Building on Brentano's characterization of intentionality, the 1980s saw a wave of naturalizing projects: Dretske's informational semantics, Millikan's teleosemantics grounded in selection history, and Fodor's asymmetric-dependence account, each addressing the problem of how representation can misfire.

Debates

The misrepresentation problem
How a naturalistic theory can allow a state to represent something falsely without collapsing the content into a disjunction of its causes.
Function versus information
Whether biological function or carried information is the more fundamental determinant of content.

Key figures

  • Fred Dretske
  • Ruth Millikan
  • Jerry Fodor
  • Franz Brentano

Related topics

Seminal works

  • brentano1874
  • dretske1981
  • millikan1984
  • fodor1987

Frequently asked questions

What is the disjunction problem?
It is the difficulty that a simple causal theory of content makes a symbol mean the disjunction of everything that causes it, leaving no room for misrepresentation.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts