Uwe Peters’s research while affiliated with KU Leuven and other places

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Publications (3)


The complementarity of mindshaping and mindreading
  • Article
  • Publisher preview available

July 2019

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65 Reads

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13 Citations

Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences

Uwe Peters

Why do we engage in folk psychology, that is, why do we think about and ascribe propositional attitudes (beliefs, desires, intentions etc.) to people? On the standard view, folk psychology is primarily for mindreading, for detecting mental states and explaining and/or predicting people’s behaviour in terms of them. In contrast, McGeer (1996, 2007, 2015), and Zawidzki (2008, 2013) maintain that folk psychology is not primarily for mindreading but for mindshaping, that is, for moulding people’s behaviour and minds (e.g., via the imposition of social norms) so that coordination becomes easier. Mindreading is derived from and only as effective as it is because of mindshaping, not vice versa. I critically assess McGeer’s, and Zawidzki’s proposal and contend that three common motivations for the mindshaping view do not provide sufficient support for their particular version of it. I argue furthermore that their proposal underestimates the role that epistemic processing plays for mindshaping. And I provide reasons for favouring an alternative according to which in social cognition involving ascriptions of propositional attitudes, neither mindshaping nor mindreading is primary but both are complementary in that effective mindshaping depends as much on mindreading as effective mindreading depends on mindshaping.

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Implicit bias, ideological bias, and epistemic risks in philosophy

June 2018

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93 Reads

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15 Citations

Mind & Language

It has been argued that implicit biases are operative in philosophy and lead to significant epistemic costs in the field. Philosophers working on this issue have focused mainly on implicit gender and race biases. They have overlooked ideological bias, which targets political orientations. Psychologists have found ideological bias in their field and have argued that it has negative epistemic effects on scientific research. I relate this debate to the field of philosophy and argue that if, as some studies suggest, the same bias also exists in philosophy then it will lead to hitherto unrecognised epistemic hazards in the field. Furthermore, the bias is epistemically different from the more familiar biases in respects that are important for epistemology, ethics, and metaphilosophy.


Introspection, mindreading, and the transparency of belief

February 2018

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18 Reads

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2 Citations

European Journal of Philosophy

This paper explores the nature of self-knowledge of beliefs by investigating the relationship between self-knowledge of beliefs and one's knowledge of other people's beliefs. It introduces and defends a new account of self-knowledge of beliefs according to which this type of knowledge is developmentally interconnected with and dependent on resources already used for acquiring knowledge of other people's beliefs, which is inferential in nature. But when these resources are applied to oneself, one attains and subsequently frequently uses a method for acquiring knowledge of beliefs that is non-inferential in nature. The paper argues that this account is preferable to some of the most common empirically motivated theories of self-knowledge of beliefs and explains the origin of the widely discussed phenomenon that our own beliefs are often transparent to us in that we can determine whether we believe that p simply by settling whether p is the case.

Citations (3)


... Today we study folk attributions of a wide range of different types of mental states and capacities in diverse contexts (e.g., Baron-Cohen et al., 1985;Bensalah et al., 2016;Carruthers, 2016;Denny et al., 2012;Fan et al., 2011;Frith & Frith, 2012;Happé et al., 2017;Krall et al., 2016;Krupenye & Call, 2019;Molenberghs et al., 2016;Peters, 2019;Schurz et al., 2014). It is today clear that folk psychology serves more than predicting behavior (Spaulding, 2018(Spaulding, , 2019Waytz et al., 2010). ...

Reference:

The Bad and the Good About the Phenomenal Stance
The complementarity of mindshaping and mindreading

Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences

... First, the knowledge of the subject about himself does not depend on other people ("asymmetry"). Second, the knowledge of the subject about himself depends on other people ("symmetry") [7]. W. Peters considers it necessary to combine "symmetry" and "asymmetry" and, as well as S. Aasen and Jörg Löschke, to consider them as one and indivisible [7]. ...

Introspection, mindreading, and the transparency of belief
  • Citing Article
  • February 2018

European Journal of Philosophy