THE TWO THEORIES OF INTENTIONALITY IN BRENTANO AND CHISHOLM’S ONTOLOGICAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL THESES

Revue Roumaine de Philosophie 42 (2):341-350 (2020)
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Abstract

R. M. Chisholm interprets Brentano’s theory of intentionality through the lens of two theses: the ontological thesis, according to which the intentionality of the mental designates the fact that there is an immanent object in the act; and the psychological thesis, according to which intentionality consists of the direction of the mental act toward the extra-mental object. In my paper I interpret Chisholm’s and Brentano’s theses on intentionality from two perspectives: intentionality as the most salient distinguishing feature separating the mental from the physical (Chisholm’s ontological thesis), and intentionality as a theory of the way in which mental acts with their content are related to extra-mental but theoretically-constructed objects of physics (Chisholm’s psychological thesis). Thus, an important issue of my paper is also to show that Chisholm’s well-known ontological and psychological theses on Brentanian intentionality rest on presuppositions that do not fit the program of Brentanian psychology.

Author's Profile

Ion Tanasescu
Institute of Philosophy and Psychology of The Romanian Academy

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