Is Sellars's Rylean Hypothesis Plausible? A Dialogue
Abstract
In order to provide an alternative to the Cartesian myth that knowledge of our thoughts and sensations is "given," Sellars posits a community of "Rylean ancestors" - humans at an early stage of conceptual development who possess a language containing sophisticated concepts about the physical world and about their own language and behavior, but who lack any concepts of thoughts or sensations. Sellars's presentation of this thought experiment leaves many important details sketchy. In the following dialogue, we offer our differing assessments of how well those details could be filled out. TT questions how the Rylean hypothesis could provide a plausible account of human thought and sensory experience at any stage of human conceptual development. WdeV responds to TT's challenge by filling out the picture of what the Ryleans' conceptual world would look like. TT and WdeV debate the merits and the plausibility of the resulting picture.
Department
Philosophy
Publication Date
8-2006
Journal Title
Poznan Studies in the Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities
Publisher
Rodopi
Document Type
Article
Recommended Citation
“McDowell, Sellars, and Sense Impressions” European Journal of Philosophy, Vol. 14, No. 2 (August 2006) pp. 182-201
Rights
Copyright Rodopi