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  2. Jerry Fodor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerry_Fodor

    Jerry Fodor was born in New York City on April 22, 1935, [2] and was of Jewish descent. He received his degree ( summa cum laude ) from Columbia University in 1956, where he wrote a senior thesis on Søren Kierkegaard [ 3 ] and studied with Sidney Morgenbesser , and a PhD in philosophy from Princeton University in 1960, under the direction of ...

  3. East Pole–West Pole divide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Pole–West_Pole_Divide

    The phrase was coined by Jerry Fodor at an MIT conference on cognition, at which he referred to another researcher as a "West Coast theorist," apparently unaware that the researcher worked at Yale University. [1] Very few researchers adhere strictly to the extreme positions highlighted by the East Pole–West Pole debate.

  4. Psychological nativism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychological_nativism

    Modern nativism is most associated with the work of Jerry Fodor (1935–2017), Noam Chomsky (b. 1928), and Steven Pinker (b. 1954), who argue that humans from birth have certain cognitive modules (specialised genetically inherited psychological abilities) that allow them to learn and acquire certain skills, such as language.

  5. Methodological solipsism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methodological_solipsism

    Fodor defines methodological solipsism as the extreme position that states that the content of someone's beliefs about, say, water has absolutely nothing to do with the substance water in the outside world, nor with the commonly accepted definition of the society in which that person lives. Everything is determined internally.

  6. Innatism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Innatism

    Nativism is a modern view rooted in innatism. The advocates of nativism are mainly philosophers who also work in the field of cognitive psychology or psycholinguistics : most notably Noam Chomsky and Jerry Fodor (although the latter adopted a more critical attitude toward nativism in his later writings).

  7. How antisemitism became an American crisis - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/antisemitism-became-american...

    In 2014, the storied anti-bias organization (which now fights racism, nativism and gender-based violence in addition to antisemitism) recorded 912 incidents targeting Jews across the United States ...

  8. Eliminative materialism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eliminative_materialism

    Eliminative materialism (also called eliminativism) is a materialist position in the philosophy of mind. It is the idea that the majority of mental states in folk psychology do not exist. Some supporters of eliminativism argue that no coherent neural basis will be found for many everyday psychological concepts such as belief or desire, since they are poorly defined. The argument is that ...

  9. What Darwin Got Wrong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/What_Darwin_Got_Wrong

    What Darwin Got Wrong is a 2010 book by philosopher Jerry Fodor and cognitive scientist Massimo Piattelli-Palmarini, in which the authors criticize Charles Darwin's theory of natural selection. It is an extension of an argument first presented as "Why Pigs Don't Have Wings" in the London Review of Books .