Propositional Attitudes
Propositional attitudes are mental states such as believing, desiring, and hoping that involve taking an attitude toward a proposition.
Definition
A propositional attitude is a mental state that consists in a subject bearing a psychological relation, such as believing or desiring, to a proposition that gives the state its content.
Scope
This topic covers the nature and structure of propositional attitudes, the realism-instrumentalism debate over their status, the intentional stance, and eliminativist challenges to folk psychology. It addresses whether attitudes like belief are genuine inner states with causal roles.
Core questions
- What is the structure of a state like believing that it is raining?
- Are beliefs and desires real inner states or useful interpretive posits?
- Do propositional attitudes have causal powers in virtue of their content?
- Could a mature science eliminate the categories of folk psychology?
Key concepts
- belief
- desire
- intentional stance
- folk psychology
- eliminativism
- opacity
Key theories
- Intentional-stance instrumentalism
- Attributing beliefs and desires is adopting a predictive stance toward a system; attitudes are real patterns rather than discrete inner objects.
- Realism about the attitudes
- Propositional attitudes are genuine, causally efficacious internal states, plausibly realized as relations to sentences in a language of thought.
History
Debate over the attitudes crystallized around the status of folk psychology: Fodor defended realism with the language of thought, Dennett (1987) offered an intentional-stance reading on which attitudes are real patterns, and Churchland (1981) and Stich (1983) argued that folk psychology is a theory that science may overturn.
Debates
- Realism versus instrumentalism
- Whether propositional attitudes are genuine inner states with causal roles or interpretive posits we use to predict behavior.
- Eliminativism about folk psychology
- Whether the categories of belief and desire will survive in a mature cognitive science or be eliminated.
Key figures
- Daniel Dennett
- Jerry Fodor
- Paul Churchland
- Stephen Stich
Related topics
Seminal works
- churchland1981
- stich1983
- dennett1987
Frequently asked questions
- Why are they called 'propositional' attitudes?
- Because such states involve an attitude, like believing or wanting, directed at a proposition, the content expressed by a that-clause such as 'that it is raining'.