Aaron Schiller is a graduate student at the University of California, San Diego. His dissertation concerns the contemporary debate over the place of nonconceptual content in characterizing the content of experience, and argues that an epistemologically motivated conceptualism can be phenomenologically plausible.
Psychological Nominalism and the Plausibility of Sellars's Myth of Jones
Article first published online: 2 MAR 2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.2041-6962.2007.tb00059.x
2007 The University of Memphis
Additional Information
How to Cite
Schiller, A. A. (2007), Psychological Nominalism and the Plausibility of Sellars's Myth of Jones. The Southern Journal of Philosophy, 45: 435–454. doi: 10.1111/j.2041-6962.2007.tb00059.x
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Aaron Schiller is a graduate student at the University of California, San Diego. His dissertation concerns the contemporary debate over the place of nonconceptual content in characterizing the content of experience, and argues that an epistemologically motivated conceptualism can be phenomenologically plausible.
Publication History
- Issue published online: 2 MAR 2010
- Article first published online: 2 MAR 2010
- Abstract
- Cited By
Abstract
Part of Sellars's general attack on the Myth of the Given is his endorsement of psychological nominalism, a view that implies that awareness of our own mental states is not given but must be earned. Sellars provides an account of how such awareness might have been earned with the Myth of Jones. Such an account is important for Sellars, for without it the Given can look necessary after all. But a problem with such accounts is that they can look extremely implausible. Sellars himself seems unconcerned to make his account plausible, and so others have stepped in here. But, I argue, they have done so in ways that fail to respect his psychological nominalism. This evinces, as well as reinforces, a lack of sensitivity to the scope of Sellars's attack on the Given, the aim of which is the dismantling of “the entire framework of givenness.” In this essay, I show how one can make Sellars's Myth of Jones plausible, while still respecting his psychological nominalism, by seeing how Jones's thought is governed by the norms of rationality as interpretability.

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