Abstract

Abstract The issue of methodological solipsism in the philosophy of mind and psychology has received enormous attention and discussion in the decade since the appearance of Jerry Fodor's (1980) Methodological solipsism. But most of this discussion has focused on the consideration of the now infamous ‘Twin Earth’ type examples and the problems they present for Fodor's notion of ‘narrow content’. I think there is deeper and more general moral to be found in this issue, particularly in light of Fodor's more recent defense of his view in Psychosemantics (Fodor, 1987). Underlying this discussion are questions about the nature and plausibility of the claim that scientific explanation should observe a constraint of methodological individualism. My goal in what follows is to bring out this more general problem in Fodor's ‘internalist’ account of the mental. My interest here lies in part in the role which a misuse of ‘methodological individualism’ plays in Fodor's arguments about psychological taxonomy. But I will...

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