Intuition pumps and other tools for thinking

Daniel Clement Dennett

Book - 2013

Over a storied career, philosopher Daniel C. Dennett has engaged questions about science and the workings of the mind. His answers have combined rigorous argument with strong empirical grounding. And a lot of fun. This book offers seventy-seven of Dennett's most successful "imagination-extenders and focus-holders" meant to guide you through some of life's most treacherous subject matter: evolution, meaning, mind, and free will. With patience and wit, Dennett deftly deploys his thinking tools to gain traction on these thorny issues while offering readers insight into how and why each tool was built. Ranging across disciplines as diverse as psychology, biology, computer science, and physics, Dennett's tools embrace in... equal measure light-heartedness and accessibility as they welcome uninitiated and seasoned readers alike. As always, his goal remains to teach you how to "think reliably and even gracefully about really hard questions."--From publisher description.

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Subjects
Published
New York : W. W. Norton & Company 2013.
Language
English
Main Author
Daniel Clement Dennett (-)
Edition
1st ed
Physical Description
xiv, 496 p. ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780393082067
  • Preface
  • I. Introduction: What Is an Intuition Pump?
  • II. A Dozen General Thinking Tools
  • 1. Making Mistakes
  • 2. "By Parody of Reasoning": Using Reductio ad Absurdum
  • 3. Rapoport's Rules
  • 4. Sturgeon's Law
  • 5. Occam's Razor
  • 6. Occam's Broom
  • 7. Using Lay Audiences as Decoys
  • 8. Jootsing
  • 9. Three Species of Goulding: Rathering, Piling On, and the Gould Two-Step
  • 10. The "Surely" Operator: A Mental Block
  • 11. Rhetorical Questions
  • 12. What Is a Deepity?
  • Summary
  • III. Tools for Thinking About Meaning or Content
  • 13. Murder in Trafalgar Square
  • 14. An Older Brother Living in Cleveland
  • 15. "Daddy Is a Doctor"
  • 16. Manifest Image and Scientific Image
  • 17. Folk Psychology
  • 18. The Intentional Stance
  • 19. The Personal/Sub-personal Distinction
  • 20. A Cascade of Homunculi
  • 21. The Sorta Operator
  • 22. Wonder Tissue
  • 23. Trapped in the Robot Control Room
  • IV. An Interlude About Computers
  • 24. The Seven Secrets of Computer Power Revealed
  • 25. Virtual Machines
  • 26. Algorithms
  • 27. Automating the Elevator
  • Summary
  • V. More Tools About Meaning
  • 28. A Thing about Redheads
  • 29. The Wandering Two-Bitser, Twin Earth, and the Giant Robot
  • 30. Radical Translation and a Quinian Crossword Puzzle
  • 31. Semantic Engines and Syntactic Engines
  • 32. Swampman Meets a Cow-Shark
  • 33. Two Black Boxes
  • Summary
  • VI. Tools for Thinking About Evolution
  • 34. Universal Acid
  • 35. The Library of Mendel: Vast and Vanishing
  • 36. Genes as Words or as Subroutines
  • 37. The Tree of Life
  • 38. Cranes and Skyhooks, Lifting in Design Space
  • 39. Competence without Comprehension
  • 40. Free-Floating Rationales
  • 41. Do Locusts Understand Prime Numbers?
  • 42. How to Explain Stotting
  • 43. Beware of the Prime Mammal
  • 44. When Does Speciation Occur?
  • 45. Widowmakers, Mitochondrial Eve, and Retrospective Coronations
  • 46. Cycles
  • 47. What Does the Frog's Eye Tell the Frog's Brain?
  • 48. Leaping through Space in the Library of Babel
  • 49. Who Is the Author of Spamlet?
  • 50. Noise in the Virtual Hotel
  • 51. Herb, Alice, and Hal, the Baby
  • 52. Memes
  • Summary
  • VII. Tools for Thinking about Consciousness
  • 53. Two Counter-images
  • 54. The Zombie Hunch
  • 55. Zombies and Zimboes
  • 56. The Curse of the Cauliflower
  • 57. Vim: How Much Is That in "Real Money"?
  • 58. The Sad Case of Mr. Clapgras
  • 59. The Tuned Deck
  • 60. The Chinese Room
  • 61. The Teleclone Fall from Mars to Earth
  • 62. The Self as the Center of Narrative Gravity
  • 63. Heterophenomenology
  • 64. Mary the Color Scientist: A Boom Crutch Unveiled
  • Summary
  • VIII. Tools for Thinking About Free Will
  • 65. A Truly Nefarious Neurosurgeon
  • 66. A Deterministic Toy: Conway's Game of Life
  • 67. Rock, Paper, and Scissors
  • 68. Two Lotteries
  • 69. Inert Historical Facts
  • 70. A Computer Chess Marathon
  • 71. Ultimate Responsibility
  • 72. Sphexishness
  • 73. The Boys from Brazil: Another Boom Crutch
  • Summary
  • IX. What is it Like to be a Philosopher?
  • 74. A Faustian Bargain
  • 75. Philosophy as Naïve Auto-anthropology
  • 76. Higher-Order Truths of Chmess
  • 77. The 10 Percent That's Good
  • X. Use the Tools Try Harder
  • XI. What Got Left Out
  • Appendix: Solutions to Register Machine Problems
  • Sources
  • Bibliography
  • Credits
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A grab-bag of metaphors and thought experiments, some more enlightening than others, structure this scattershot treatise on the philosophy of mind. Tufts philosophy professor Dennett (Consciousness Explained) rehashes favorite themes from previous works: how consciousness arises from the brain's decentralized information-processing; how Darwinian natural selection explains the development of complex structure from simple origins in innumerable contexts; how computers and artificial intelligence make potent explanatory models of the mind; the existence of free will in a deterministic universe. Opening with an engaging tutorial on argumentative strategies from reductio ad absurdum to Occam's Razor to rhetorical questions, Dennett expounds his ideas through a series of "intuition pumps," his term for the hypothetical scenarios philosophers contrive to explore difficult concepts. Some of these, like conceiving of the body as a robotic survival vehicle for the genes, or the brain as a clueless man trapped in a sealed chamber, are evocative. Others, like an obscure meditation on a vending machine that accepts Panamanian balboas instead of U. S. quarters, are not. In his loose-limbed excursions Dennett presents compelling expositions of provocative ideas, spars with rival thinkers and, sometimes, bogs down in long-winded belaborings of tiresome points. The result is an intellectual smorgasbord with dishes both tasty and indigestible. 31 illus. Agent: John Brockman, Brockman Inc. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Dennett (philosophy, Tufts Univ.; Consciousness Explained) thinks of intuition as ideas that have a central place around which other ideas hang. His phrase, "intuition pumps," refers to the philosopher's tools used to push such ideas to their limits. He argues that intuitions are either pushed aside and replaced with new ones, or they survive and become even more firmly rooted. According to Dennett, some of these tools are formal (the reductio ad absurdum), others are informal (various rhetorical fallacies), and still others resemble thought experiments. He introduces these general philosophical tools and then moves to a discussion of topics in which he is well known, such as evolution, consciousness, free will, etc. The author's weakness is lack of analysis; however, the concept of intuition pumps is in general provocative and makes for an entertaining intellectual appetizer. VERDICT Dennett shows himself again to be both avuncular to the curious and confrontational with opposing scholars. General readers and professionals should find him most engaging.-James -Wetherbee, Wingate Univ. Libs., NC (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A famous thinker demonstrates how he does his job. Thinking is hard, writes Dennett (Philosophy/Tufts Univ.; Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon, 2006, etc.), who then proceeds to explain how to do it right. He stresses that history's philosophical giants have relied on vivid, although not necessarily accurate, thought experiments, which he dubs "intuition pumps" (Plato's Cave, Descartes' evil demon, Kant's categorical imperative). Dennett begins with a dozen general-purpose tools, from the popular reductio ad absurdum (examine a statement for preposterous implications) to a warning to watch out for the deepity, a proposition that seems profound only because it's ambiguous ("Love is just a word"). Having delivered these devices, he goes on to show how they illuminate or, equally often, shoot down arguments on great philosophical subjects such as consciousness, evolution and free will, as well as revealing the thought processes of philosophers themselves, with emphasis on those with whom Dennett disagrees. A well-known materialist, he has no patience with explanations that involve "magic," whether it is a god who creates everything, an evolutionary structure too complex to result from a natural process or a human mind with secrets beyond the reach of science. Those who deny that one can compare the brain to a gigantic computer don't understand how computers work. Much of their operation appears genuinely magical but isn't. Despite a generous helping of wit and amusing anecdotes, this is not Philosophy for Dummies. Many of the short chapters require close attention and rereading, but those willing to work will come away with a satisfying understanding of how deep thinkers think.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.