
Contents
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10.1 Introduction 10.1 Introduction
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10.2 A Hopeless Definition 10.2 A Hopeless Definition
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10.3 Difficulties 10.3 Difficulties
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10.3.1 Vagueness 10.3.1 Vagueness
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10.3.2 Motionlessness 10.3.2 Motionlessness
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10.3.3 Classification 10.3.3 Classification
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10.3.4 Doings and Happenings 10.3.4 Doings and Happenings
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10.3.5 Internally Caused 10.3.5 Internally Caused
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10.3.6 Doubts about Doing 10.3.6 Doubts about Doing
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10.3.7 Doing and the Central Control System 10.3.7 Doing and the Central Control System
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10.3.8 Adaptive Function 10.3.8 Adaptive Function
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10.3.9 The Place of the Central Control System 10.3.9 The Place of the Central Control System
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10.4 Other-Observability 10.4 Other-Observability
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10.4.1 Mental Action as Behavior 10.4.1 Mental Action as Behavior
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10.4.2 Mental Activity as Behavior 10.4.2 Mental Activity as Behavior
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10.4.3 Summary 10.4.3 Summary
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10.5 Neo-neobehaviorism 10.5 Neo-neobehaviorism
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Cite
Abstract
The philosophy of mind is not concerned with all uses of the word “behavior.” Most contemporary philosophers of mind are neobehaviorists who argue that reference to behavior enters essentially into a satisfactory account of the nature of almost all, if not all, mental states and mental phenomena. This chapter explores the standard use of the word “behavior” and suggests that there is a defensible wider notion of behavior which improves the prospects of neobehaviorism. It offers a definition of “behavior” based on four arguably overlapping conditions, including other-observability, considers the notions of adaptive function and a central control system, and, finally, discusses mental action and mental activity as behavior.
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