Curriculum Vitae: JOHN HAUGELAND

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Curriculum Vitae: JOHN HAUGELAND

Curriculum vitae:

John Haugeland, David B. and Clara E. Stern Professor of Philosophy University of Chicago June 2009

Address: Stuart Hall, 207 Department of Philosophy 1115 East 58th Street 5500 S. Harper Ave. University of Chicago Chicago, IL 60637 Chicago, IL 60637 (773) 667-6553 (773) 702-6208 [email protected] Personal: American citizen; born 13 March 1945; male; married (to the beautiful Joan Wellman). Education: U.C. Berkeley 66-67 & 70-73 Ph.D., Philosophy, 76 Harvey Mudd College 62-66 B.S., Physics (honors), 66 Dissertation: Title: Truth and Understanding; advisor: Hans Sluga. Academic employment: University of Chicago 7/06 to date David B. and Clara E. Stern Professor 7/04 to 6/07 Department Chair 7/99 to date Professor University of Pittsburgh 9/86 to 8/99 Professor 9/81 to 8/86 Associate Professor 9/76 to 8/81 Assistant Professor 9/74 to 8/76 Instructor U.C. Berkeley Summer 76 Visiting Instructor Pomona College 1/74 to 6/74 Visiting Instructor St. John's High School 1/68 to 12/69 Peace Corps (Tonga)

1 Other appointments, service, and awards: John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship, 2003–2004. Committee for Conceptual and Historical Studies of Science, University of Chicago, 2000 – date. Board of Directors, Franke Institute for the Humanities, University of Chicago, 2000 – 2002. Resident staff and lecturer, NEH Institute: Background Practices, University of California, Santa Cruz, June 23 – June 27, 1997. Post-graduate seminar (20 hours): Beyond the Intentional Stance, Inter-nordic Semester, University of Helsinki, November 27 – December 1, 1995. Resident staff and lecturer, NEH Institute: Embodied Mind, University of California, Santa Cruz, July 25 – August 5, 1994. Post-graduate seminar (20 hours) on The Philosophy of Heidegger, University of Helsinki and the Academy of Finland, Helsinki, May 3 – 14, 1993. Post-graduate seminar (20 hours) on Connectionism and the Philosophy of Mind, University of Helsinki and Academy of Finland, Helsinki, May 25 – 29, 1992. Resident staff and lecturer, NEH Institute: Heidegger & Davidson: Critics of Cartesianism, University of California, Santa Cruz, July 16 – August 17, 1990. Principal lecturer (three weeks), NEH Institute: Epistemology and the Liberal Arts, Western Michigan University, June 18 – July 6, 1990. Research Fellow, National Endowment for the Humanities, 1989-90. Member, Council for Philosophical Studies, 1987 to 1991. APA Eastern Division Program Committee, 1987. Acting Chair, Philosophy Department, University of Pittsburgh, Spring 1985. Co-director, NEH “follow-up” Institute, APA Western, Columbus, April 1982. — repeated (new funding): APA Pacific, Berkeley, March 1983. Cognitive Science Fellow, Institute of Human Learning (Berkeley), Spring 1981. Co-organizer, assistant director, and lecturer: Council for Philosophical Studies Institute: Phenomenology and Existentialism—Continental and Analytic Perspectives on Intentionality, U.C., Berkeley, June 23 – August 1, 1980. Research Associate, Center for Philosophy of Science (Pittsburgh), 1980 – 99. Fellow, Center for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral Sciences, 1979 – 80. Research Fellow, National Endowment for the Humanities, 1979 – 80. University of Pittsburgh Third Term Research Grant (twice), 1975 & 1978. Publications—Books: The Road Since Structure: Philosophical Essays, 1970–1993, with an Autobiographical Interview, Thomas S. Kuhn (co-edited, with Jim Conant), Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 2000.

2 Having Thought: Essays in the Metaphysics of Mind, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1998. Mind Design II (editor—second edition, revised and enlarged), Cambridge, MA: Bradford/MIT Press, 1997. Artificial Intelligence: The Very Idea, Cambridge, MA: Bradford/MIT Press, 1985. — translated into German as: Künstliche Intelligenz—Programmierte Vernunft?, Hamburg: McGraw-Hill GmBH, 1987. — translated into Italian as: Intelligenzia Artificiale, Torino: Bollati Boringhieri, 1988. — translated into Spanish as: La Inteligencia Artificial, México, D.F.: Siglo Veintiuno Editores, 1988. — translated into French as: L'Esprit dans la Machine, Paris: Éditions Odile Jacob, 1989. — translated into Greek as: , Athens: , 1992. Mind Design (editor), Cambridge, MA: Bradford/MIT Press, 1981. — translated into Italian as: Progettare la Mente, Bologna: Società editrice il Mulino, 1989. Publications—Articles: “Reading Brandom Reading Heidegger,” European Journal of Philosophy (forthcoming). “Intelligence and the Ability to Take Responsibility” (an interview, conducted by Costas Pagondiotis), Cogito (Athens), no 4, February 2006, pp 34 – 37. “Letting Be”, in Heidegger’s Transcendentalism, Steven Crowell and Jeff Malpas, eds., Stanford University Press (2007), 93–103. “Social Cartesianism”, in: The Externalist Challenge: New Studies on Cognition and Intentionality, Richard Schantz, ed., de Gruyter (2004), 213–225. “Closing the Last Loophole: Joining Forces with Vincent Descombes”, Inquiry 47:3 (2004) 254–266. “Authentic Intentionality”, in: Computationalism: New Directions, Matthias Scheutz, ed., MIT Press (2002), 159-174. “Syntax, Semantics, Physics”, in: Views into the Chinese Room: New Essays on Searle and Artificial Intelligence. John Preston and Mark Bishop, eds., Oxford University Press (2002), 379-392. “Andy Clark on Cognition and Representation” and “Reply to Cummins on Repre- sentation and Intentionality”, in: Philosophy of Mental Representation, Hugh Clapin, ed., Oxford University Press (2002), 24-36 and 138-144. “Truth and Finitude: Heidegger’s Transcendental Existentialism”, in: Heidegger, Authenticity, and Modernity: Essays in Honor of Hubert L. Dreyfus, Mark Wrathall and Jeff Malpas, eds., MIT Press (2000), 43–77. — reprinted in: Heidegger, Stephen Mulhall, ed., Ashgate Press (2006) 137 – 174. “Truth and Rule Following”, in: Haugeland 1998.

3 “Hume on Personal Identity” (written in 1974), in: Haugeland 1998. “What is Mind Design?” (introduction to Mind Design II) (1997). “Objective Perception”, in: Perception: Vancouver Studies in Cognitive Science, Volume V, Kathleen Akins, ed., Oxford University Press (1996) 268-289. — reprinted in: Haugeland 1998. “Remarks on Machines and Rule-Following” in: Philosophy and The Cognitive Sciences: Proceedings of the 16th International Wittgenstein Symposium (1993), Roberto Casati, Barry Smith, and Graham White, eds., Hölder-Pichler-Tempsky (1994) ??-??. “Mind Embodied and Embedded,” in: Mind and Cognition: Philosophical Prespectives on Cognitive Science and Artificial Intelligence, Leila Haaparanta and Sara Heinämaa, eds., Acta Philosophica Fennica: 58 (1995) 233–267. — reprinted in: Mind and Cognition, Yu-Houng Houng and Jih-Ching Ho, eds., Taipei, Taiwan: Institute of European and American Studies, Academia Sinica (1995) 3–37. — reprinted in: Haugeland 1998. “Understanding: Dennett and Searle,” in: Consciousness in Philosophy and and Cognitive Neuroscience, Antti Revonsuo and Matti Kamppinen, eds., Lawrence Erlbaum Associates (1994) 115-128. — reprinted in: Haugeland 1998. “Pattern and Being,” in: Dennett and His Critics, Bo Dahlbom, ed., Basil Blackwell (1993) 53-69. — reprinted in: Haugeland 1998. “Representational Genera,” in: Philosophy and Connectionist Theory, William Ramsey, Stephen Stich, and David Rumelhart, eds., Lawrence Erlbaum Associates (1991) 61- 89. — reprinted in: Philosophy and the Computer, Leslie Burkholder, ed., Westview Press (1992) 105-134. — reprinted in: Haugeland 1998. “The Intentionality All-Stars,” in: Philosophical Perspectives, IV: Philosophy of Mind and Action Theory, James E. Tomberlin, ed., Ridgeview Publishing (1990) 383-427. — reprinted in: The Philosopher's Annual, Volume XII, Patrick Grim, Gary Mar, and Peter Williams, eds., Ridgeview Publishing (1991) 87-131. — reprinted in: Haugeland 1998. “Dasein's Disclosedness,” Southern Journal of Philosophy, XXVIII, Supplement (1990) 51-73. — reprinted in: Heidegger: A Critical Reader, H.L. Dreyfus and Harrison Hall, eds., Basil Blackwell (1992) 27-44. “Artificial Intelligence and the Western Mind,” in: The Computer and the Brain: Perspectives on Human and Artificial Intelligence, Jean R. Brink and C. Roland Haden, eds., Elsevier Science Publishers (1989) 17-30.

4 “An Overview of the Frame Problem,” in The Robot's Dilemma, Zenon Pylyshyn, ed., Ablex Publishing (1987) 77-93. “Ontological Supervenience,” Southern Journal of Philosophy, XXII, Supplement (1984) 1-12. — reprinted in: Haugeland 1998. “Phenomenal Causes” (comment on Kim), Southern Journal of Philosophy, XXII, Supplement (1984) 63-70. “The Paradox of Mechanical Computation,” in: Proceedings of the Cognitive Curriculum Conference, Marjorie Lucas and Pat Hayes, eds., Cognitive Science Program, University of Rochester (1984) 43-57. “First Among Equals” (comment on Lehnert and Clancey), in: Methods and Tactics in Cognitive Science, Kintsch, Miller, and Polson, eds., Lawrence Erlbaum Associates (1984) 85-99. “Heidegger on Being a Person,” Noûs, XVI (1982) 15-26. “Weak Supervenience,” American Philosophical Quarterly, 19 (1982) 93-103. — reprinted in: Haugeland 1998. “The Mother of Intention” (review of Dennett's Brainstorms), Noûs, XVI (1982) 613- 619. “Analog and Analog,” Philosophical Topics, 12 (1981) 213-225. — reprinted in: Mind, Brain, and Function, J.I. Biro and Robert W. Shahan, eds., University of Oklahoma Press (1982) 213-225. — reprinted in: Haugeland 1998. “Semantic Engines,” in: Mind Design, John Haugeland, ed., Bradford/MIT Press (1981) 1-34. “Understanding Natural Language,” Journal of Philosophy, 76 (1979) 619-632. — reprinted in: Foundations of Cognitive Science: The Essential Readings, Jay Garfield, ed., Paragon Press (1990) 398-410. — reprinted in: Mind and Cognition, William Lycan, ed., Basil Blackwell (1990) 660- 670. — reprinted in: Haugeland 1998. — reprinted (exerpted?) in: Philosophical Questions, James Fieser and Norman Lillegard, eds., Oxford University Press (2004) ??? – ???. “The Nature and Plausibility of Cognitivism,” The Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 1 (1978) 215-226; published with thirty-one critical comments and a rejoinder. — reprinted in: Haugeland 1981. — reprinted in: Haugeland 1998. Publications—Co-authored articles: “Intentionality” (with D.C. Dennett), in: Oxford Companion to the Mind, R.L. Gregory, ed., Oxford University Press (1988) 383-386.

5 “Continental and Analytic Perspectives in the Philosophy Curriculum” (with H.L. Dreyfus), APA Newsletter on Teaching Philosophy, 2 (1981) 1-6. — reprinted as a booklet by The Council for Philosophical Studies (1981). “Husserl and Heidegger: Philosophy's Last Stand” (with H.L. Dreyfus), in: Heidegger and Modern Philosophy, Michael Murray, ed., Yale University Press (1978) 222-238. “The Computer as a Mistaken Model of the Mind” (with H.L. Dreyfus), in: Philosophy of Psychology, S.C. Brown, ed., MacMillan (1974) 247-258. Publications—Short articles, reviews, and comments: “Reply to Cummins on Representation and Intentionality”, forthcoming in a volume on representation, Oxford University Press, Hugh Clapin, editor. “Philosophy and Folk Psychology” (comment on Barbara von Eckardt), in: Mindscapes: Philosophy, Science, and the Mind, Martin Carrier and Peter K. Mahamer, eds., University of Pittsburgh Press (1997) 52-60. “Body and World” (review of What Computers Still Can’t Do, by H.L. Dreyfus), Artificial Intelligence 80 (1996) 119-128. “Artificial Intelligence,” in: The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy, Robert Audi, ed., Cambridge University Press (1995) 46-50. “Farewell to GOFAI?” (an interview), in: Speaking Minds: Interviews with Twenty Eminent Cognitive Scientists, Peter Baumgartner and Sabine Payr, eds., Princeton University Press (1995) 101-114. Review of Heidegger and the Philosophy of Mind, by Frederick A. Olafson, Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 50 (1990) 633-635. “Philosophy at CMU: Past, Present, Future,” in: Acting & Reflecting, Wilfried Sieg, ed., Kluwer Academic Publishers (1990) 44-47. Review of Computation and Cognition, by Zenon W. Pylyshyn, in: Philosophy of Science, 54 (1987) 309-311. “How Can a Symbol ‘Mean’ Something?” (comment on Woods), in: Meaning and Cognitive Structure, Zenon Pylyshyn and William Demopoulos, eds., Ablex Publishing (1986) 86-92. “Phenomenology Strikes Back” (review of Husserl, Intentionality, and Cognitive Science, by H.L. Dreyfus), Contemporary Psychology, 29 (1984) 295-296. “Building Bridges” (review of Minds and Mechanisms, by Margaret Boden), Contemporary Psychology, 29 (1984) 294-295. Review of Brainstorms, by Daniel C. Dennett, Philosophy of Science, 47 (1980) 326-327. “Programs, Causal Powers, and Intentionality” (comment on Searle), The Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 3 (1980) 432-433. — reprinted in: Foundations of Cognitive Science: The Essential Readings, Jay Garfield, ed., Paragon Press (1990) 219-223. “Psychology and Computational Architecture” (comment on Pylyshyn), The Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 3 (1980) 138-139.

6 “Formality and Naturalism” (comment on Fodor), The Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 3 (1980) 81-82. “The Problem of Generality” (comment on Pylyshyn), The Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 1 (1978) 107-108. Professional presentations: “What is the Mind?”, (Mind Conference), Madison, upcoming, April 2010. “Was Heißt Dasein?” International Society for Phenomenlogical Studies (“Asilomar” 2008). “Normativity and the Mental”, University of Kentucky, October 2007. “Why Heidegger talks about Death”, Santa Clara University (April 2007). Commentary on McDowell and Dreyfus, plenary session entitled: “Phenomenology and Perception”, Eastern APA, December 2006. “Two Dogmas of Rationalism”, Georgetown University (April 2006). — also: Haverford College (September 2005). — also: University of Illinois Champaign-Urbana (October 2005). — also: Institute of Logic and Cognition, Zhongshan University, Guangzhou, China (special version) (June 2005). — also: University of Toronto (May 2004). — also: Duke University (February 2003). — also: Uppsala University (June 2002). — also: University of Copenhagen (May 2001). — also: University of Illinois, Chicago (March 2001). — also: Northern Illinois University, DeKalb (March 2001). — also: University of Chicago (October 2000). — also: Arkansas Philosophical Association, keynote address (October 2000). — also: University of New Mexico (April 2000). — also: Technical University of Athens (May 1999). — also: University of California, Berkeley (April 1999). — also: University of Kansas (March 1999). “Reading Brandom Reading Heidegger”, American Philosophical Association (“author- meets-critics” session on Brandom, March 2005). “Closing the Last Loophole: Joining Forces with Vincent Descombes”, University of Chicago (May 2003). “Letting Be”, Heidegger and Transcendental Philosophy, Rice University (April 2003). “Social Cartesianism”, Wake Forest University (April 2003). — also: Bates College (November 2002). — also: Western Michigan University (October 2002).

7 “Temporality”, International Society for Phenomenological Studies (keynote address), Asilomar (July 2002). “Language: Kuhn’s Evolving Commitments”, Committee for Conceptual and Historical Studies of Science, University of Chicago (April 2001). “The Meaning of Life”, Walsh University (November 2000). — also: Wesleyan University, CT (April 2000). — also: Center for Twentieth-Century Studies, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee (December 1999). — also: University of Kansas (March 1999). — also: Technical University of Athens (May 1998). — also: Franklin and Marshall College (May 1997). “Ecstatico-Horizonal Unity”, International Society for Phenomenological Studies, Asilomar (July 2000). “Godless Objectivity”, Franke Institute for Humanities, University of Chicago (May 2000). “Heidegger on Resoluteness and Death”, Society for Phenomenological and Existentential Philosophy, University of Oregon (October 1999). “Andy Clark on Cognition and Representation”, workshop on representation, Blue Hill, Maine (August 1999). “Reply to Cummins on Representation and Intentionality”, workshop on representation, Blue Hill, Maine (August 1999). “Authentic Intentionality”, Society for Computers and Philosophy, keynote address, Pittsburgh (August 1999). — also: Workshop on representation, Blue Hill, Maine (August 1999) — also: Conference on “The New Computationalism”, Vienna (May 1999). Replies to Dan Dennett and Joseph Rouse, “Author meets Critics” session, APA Central, New Orleans (April 1999). “Originary Intentionality”, Carleton University, Ottawa (November, 1998). — also: University of California, Davis (October 1998). “The Meaning of Death”, Technical University of Athens (May 1998). “Objectivity: Between Realism and Pragmatism”, University of Virginia (November 1996). “Objectivity with a Human Face”, Workshop on Anthropomorphism in Science, Delphi, Greece (June 1996). “Why Sciences Must Have Laws (or something like them)”, Center for Philosophy of Science Fellows Conference, Castiglioncello, Italy (May 1996). “The Dynamics of Objective Knowledge”, Workshop on Dynamics, Computation, and Cognition, Santa Fe Institute (May 1996). “Intentionality and Objects”, University of Helsinki (December 1995).

8 “Philosophy and Folk Psychology” (comment on Barbara von Eckardt), Pittsburgh- Konstanz Colloquium, Konstanz, Germany (May 1995). “Truth and Rule-Following,” Rice University (March 1995). — also: NEH Institute, SantaCruz (August 1994). “Mind Embodied and Embedded,” NEH Institute, Santa Cruz (August 1994). — also: Center for Theoretical Studies, Charles University, Prague (May 1994). — also: APA Pacific Division, Los Angeles (March 1994). — also: Center for Philosohy of Science, University of Pittsburgh (December 1993). — also: Cognitive Science Group, UC Berkeley (October 1993) — also: International Symposium on “Mind and Cognition,” Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan (May 1993). — also: University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland (May 1993). “Can a Machine Follow a Rule?” 16th International Wittgenstein Symposium: Philosophy and the Cognitive Sciences, Kirchberg/Wechsel, Austria (August 1993). “The Philosophy of Death and Dasein,” UC Berkeley (October 1993) — also: Indiana University (January 1993). “Dasein's Finitude and the Understanding of Being,” Western Michigan University (October 1992). — also: University of Stockholm, Sweden (May 1992). “Embedded Cognition,” Science of Cognition Workshop, Santa Fe (June 1992). “Intentionality and Stance,” International Symposium on “Consciousness in Philosophy and Cognitive Neuroscience,” University of Turku, Finland (June 1992). “Objective Perception,” International Conference on “Cognition, Connectionism, and Semiotics,” University of Tampere, Finland (June 1992). — also: Göteborg University, Göteborg, Sweden (May 1992). — also: Lund University, Lund, Sweden (May 1992). — also: Simon Frazer University (February 1992). — also: Indiana University (October 1991). “Ego and Understanding (or: A Critique of Pure Reason),” E.I. du Pont de Nemours, Wilmington, DE (February 1993). — also: Western Michigan University (October 1992). — also: University of Göteborg, Sweden (May 1992). — also: University of Lund, Sweden (May 1992). — also: Colgate University (November 1991). — also: Denison University (October 1990). — also: The Dewald Lecture, Mount Union College (October 1990). — also: E.I. du Pont de Nemours, Kinston, NC (September 1990). — also: Computers in Academia Series, University of Pittsburgh (April 1990).

9 — also: Illinois State University (April 1990). — also: Albright College (April 1989). — also: University of Missouri, Saint Louis (February 1989). — also: Trinity University (March 1988). — also: Syracuse University (November 1987). — also: SUNY Buffalo (April 1987). — also: McGill University (March 1987). — also: Occidental College (February 1987). — also: Conference on “History and Future Prospects for Audit Judgement Research,” USC, School of Accounting (February 1987). — also: Benedum Regional Conference on “Computers in Education,” Chatham College (June 1986). — also: Conference on “Computers and Writing,” University of Pittsburgh (May 1986). — also: Forum on “Artificial Intelligence in Management,” sponsored by Defense Systems Management College, held in Richmond (May 1986). “Pattern and Being,” Conference on “Dasein's Brain,” San Marino, Italy (May 1991). “In Order to Be,” PARC/CSLI Sea Ranch Conference (February 1991). “Fodor & Pylyshyn vs. Connectionism,” NEH follow-up seminar, Heidelberg College (November 1990). “Dasein's Disclosedness,” NEH Institute, Santa Cruz (July 1990). — also: University of Toronto (December 1989). — also: Memphis State University (October 1989). “The Same Only Different,” University of Vermont (November 1989). — also: Virginia Polytechnic Institute (April 1989). — also: Davidson College (January 1989). — also: University of Michigan (February 1987). — also: MIT (December 1986). — also: Johns Hopkins (November 1986). “Representational Genera,” Keynote Address, Fourth International Conference on “Computers and Philosophy,” Carnegie Mellon University (September 1989). “Is There Distributed Representation?” University of Missouri, Saint Louis (February 1989). — also: Cognitive Science Society meetings, McGill University (August 1988). Symposium on “Embodied Cognition,” Society for Philosophy and Psychology (meeting at Chapel Hill, May 1988). “Two Models of Intelligence,” Temple University (April 1988).

10 — also: Learning and Development brownbag, University of Pittsburgh (January 1988). — also: University of Illinois (November 1987). — also: Ohio State University (October 1987). — also: Bicentennial Conference on “The Brain,” University of Pittsburgh (May 1987). Conduct three-day faculty seminar on “Death and Responsibility in Heidegger,” St. Olaf’s College (September 1987). “Origins of Money, the Alphabet, and Philosophy,” Centennial Conference on “Origins,” Stanford University (September 1987). “Expert Systems and Intelligence,” Maricopa Tech (April 1987). “Artificial Intelligence and the Western Mind,” Trinity University (general audience) (March 1988). — also: Montclair State College (May 1987). — also: Conference in honor of John von Neumann, Arizona State University (April 1987). — also: Eastern Oregon State University (general audience) (April 1987). — also: Occidental College (February 1987). — also: St. Norbert College (February 1987). — also: Southwestern University (general audience) (October 1986). — also: The Carolina Symposium (general audience), Chapel Hill (April 1986). — also: Computer Science Dept., University of Pittsburgh (January 1984). — also: MIT (at Endicott House, for visiting Swedes) (January 1984). — also: Memphis State (general audience) (October 1983). — also: Notre Dame, School of Library Science (March 1983). — also: Dickenson College (general audience) (February 1983). — also: Temple University (public lecture series: “Current Issues in the Humanities”) (November 1981). — also: Harvey Mudd College (general audience) (May 1981). Comment on paper by John Macnamara, Conference on “Freedom and the Mind,” McGill University (September 1986). Council for Philosophical Studies sponsored “Visiting Philosopher” (a two or three day visit, involving several scheduled presentations and meetings with various groups), St. Olaf College (November 1986). — also: Davidson College (May 1986). — also: Indiana University at South Bend (April 1986). — also: Franklin and Marshall College (April 1986). Panel on “The Computational Model of the Mind,” Carnegie Mellon University (April 1986).

11 Panel on Doug Hofstadter’s “A Coffeehouse Conversation,” Babson College (March 1986). “The Intentionality All-Stars,” Conference on “Intentionality,” University of Rochester (May 1986). — also: Loyola University, New Orleans (March 1985). — also: Tufts University (November 1984). — also: Chapel Hill Colloquium, University of North Carolina (October 1984). — also: University of Chicago (February 1983). — also: Memphis State University (October 1982). — also: SUNY Buffalo (March 1982). — also: Hampshire College (February 1982). — also: Conference at University of British Columbia (August 1981). “An Overview of the Frame Problem,” Center for the Studies of Language and Information, Stanford University (May 1984). — also: Center for the Philosophy of Science Lecture Series, University of Pittsburgh (February 1984). Comment on paper by Daniel Dennett, Conference on “Philosophy and Cognitive Science,” MIT (May 1984). “Ontological Supervenience,” Spindel Conference, Memphis State (October 1983). “Phenomenal Causes” (comment on paper by Jaegwon Kim), Spindel Conference, Memphis State (October 1983). Symposium on “The Computational Metaphor,” CogSci-5, University of Rochester (May 1983). Symposium on “The Computer Metaphor of Mind—Its Scope and Limits,” Rutgers University (April 1983). Symposium on “Thinking Computers,” Hobart and William Smith College (April 1983). “From Syntax to Semantics,” APA Pacific (March 1983). Symposium on “Reductionism,” Vassar College (March 1983). Comment on paper by Robert Cummins, University of Pittsburgh (February 1983). “The Paradox of Mechanical Computation,” Rochester Conference on Cognitive Curricula (July 1982). “Heidegger on Being a Person,” APA Western (April 1982). — also: Yale University (1978). — also: Ohio State University (1978). “How can a Symbol ‘Mean’ Anything?” (comment on paper by Bill Woods), conference at University of Western Ontario (October 1981). “First among Equals” (comment on papers by Wendy Lehnert and Bill Clancey), conference at University of Colorado (July 1981). “The Mother of Intention,” Cognitive Science Colloquium, Berkeley (May 1981).

12 — also: at the SISTM Symposium on Dennett, APA Pacific (1980). Panel on “Artificial Intelligence and Computer-Aided Instruction,” Association for Development of Computer-Based Instructional Systems, convention in Atlanta (March 1981). “Weak Supervenience,” Princeton (1980). — also: Stanford (1980). — also: University of Minnesota (1980). — also: (entitled “Anomalous Monism”) University of Western Ontario (1978). “Artificial Intelligence and the Study of the Mind,” Colorado College (1980). Panel on “Artificial Intelligence and Philosophy,” American Association for Artificial Intelligence, convention in Palo Alto (1980). “Understanding Natural Language,” Cognitive Science Colloquium, Berkeley (1980). — also: APA Eastern (1979). “What is Cognitivism?” UC Berkeley (1977). Comment on a paper by Greg Sheridan, APA Eastern (1976). “Primordial Truth in Being and Time,” Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, convention in Evanston (1976). “Alphabetizing and Modern Philosophy,” Wooster College (1975). “Hume on Personal Identity,” University of Pittsburgh (1974). “What is it to be True?” Pomona College (1973). Work in progress: Dasein Disclosed, Harvard University Press. “Two Dogmas of Rationalism” (still about ready for submission). Paper for symposium on: Normativity and the Mental, University of Kentucky, Fall 2007 Two talks at the University of Nevada, Reno, September 2007

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