"What is central to our ability to interpret one another? A great deal of work in philosophy of mind, cognitive science, anthropology, developmental psychology and a host of other disciplines assumes that, at root, interpersonal interpretation is accomplished through the employment of a 'commonsense' or 'folk' psychology, meaning an 'everyday', rather than 'scientific', appreciation of mindedness." "Although there is considerable debate over which cognitive processes support our folk psychological abilities and how those abilities develop during childhood, there is a remarkable degree of consensus concerning what folk psychology involves. Most discussions begin by stating or assuming that it consists primarily of an ability to attribute propositional attitudes to humans and other organisms, in order to predict and explain their behavior. This ability is usually regarded as an underlying core that enables all social life, rather than just one amongst many ingredients of human social ability. There have been a number of recent criticisms of this orthodox characterization, which question the scope, function, reliability and even the very nature of folk psychology. This book brings them together for the first time. The contributors all maintain that current understandings of folk psychology and of the mechanisms that underlie it need to be revised, supplemented or dismissed altogether."--Jacket.
Introduction -- Expression and empathy -- We share, therefore we think -- Logical and phenomenological arguments against simulation theory -- Persons, pronouns, and perspectives -- There are reasons and reasons -- Folk psychology without theory or simulation -- The regulative dimension of folk psychology -- Folk psychology: science and morals -- Folk psychology and freedom of the will -- Critter psychology: on the possibility of nonhuman animal folk psychology -- Folk psychology does not exist -- From folk psychology to commonsense.