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Subject: Philosophy  Book Title: Mindreading
Mindreading
An Integrated Account of Pretence, Self-Awareness, and Understanding Other Minds
Nichols, Shaun , College of Charleston, South Carolina
Stich, Stephen P. , Rutgers University, New Jersey
Print publication date: 2003
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: April 2004
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-823610-8
doi:10.1093/0198236107.001.0001
 
Abstract: This volume defends an integrated account of the psychological mechanisms underlying “mindreading,” the commonplace capacity to understand the mind. The authors maintain that it is, as commonsense would suggest, vital to distinguish between reading others’ minds and reading one’s own. In reading other minds, the imagination plays a central role. As a result, the authors begin with an explicit and systematic account of pretense and imagination which proposes that pretense representations are contained in a separate mental workspace, the “Possible World Box,” which is part of the basic architecture of the human mind. The mechanisms subserving pretense get recruited in reading other minds, a capacity that implicates multifarious kinds of processes, including those favored by simulation approaches to mindreading, those favored by information-based approaches, and processes that don’t fit into either category. None of these mechanisms or processes, though, explains how we read our own minds, which, according to the authors, requires invoking an entirely independent set of mechanisms.

Keywords: folk psychology, imagination, pretense, self-awareness, simulation theory, theory theory, eliminativism, belief, desire, autism
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
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2. A Cognitive Theory of Pretence
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3. Pieces of Mind:A Theory of Third-Person Mindreading
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4. Reading One's Own Mind
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5. Objections, Replies, and Philosophical Implications
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Bibliography
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Index
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doi:10.1093/0198236107.001.0001
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