Dictionary Definition
intentionality n : expressive of intentions
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Noun
- That property of mental states and events by which they are directed at or about or of objects and states of affairs in the world (Searle, 1983) href="http://books.google.com/books%3Fq%3Dintentionality&sig=puBSXE3ENMpYb9wbppi-tTmXY54">http://books.google.com/books%3Fq%3Dintentionality&sig=puBSXE3ENMpYb9wbppi-tTmXY54
- A structure which correlates all things experienced with the
mode of experience to which experience is referenced. (Ihde 1986)
href="http://books.google.com/books%3Fq%3DIhde&sig=opYt82KsdY-9fMWvlLLkG7FSKa4">http://books.google.com/books%3Fq%3DIhde&sig=opYt82KsdY-9fMWvlLLkG7FSKa4
- 2001, Bloom, Tinker The Intentionality Model and Language
Acquisition
- Causality in the Intentionality Model is in the agency of the child. It is the child who perceived, who apprehends, who constructs the intentional state, who acts to express it, and who interprets what others do (including what they say) to construct a new intentional state. href="http://books.google.com/books%3Fq%3Dintentionality&sig=zMxmhCX3-AY9Ij9sck52rYKIqa4">http://books.google.com/books%3Fq%3Dintentionality&sig=zMxmhCX3-AY9Ij9sck52rYKIqa4
- 2001, Bloom, Tinker The Intentionality Model and Language
Acquisition
Extensive Definition
The term intentionality is often simplistically
summarized as "aboutness" or the relationship between mental acts
and the external world. Originally intentionality was a concept
from scholastic
philosophy. The concept of intentionality was later
reintroduced in 19th century contemporary philosophy by the philosopher
and psychologist Franz
Brentano in his work
Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint (1874). Brentano
defined intentionality as one characteristic of "mental phenomena,"
by which they could be distinguished from "physical phenomena"
(physische Phänomene), using such phrases as "reference to a
content", the "direction towards an object", or "the immanent
objectivity".
Overview
Every mental phenomenon (that is, every psychological act) has a content, and is directed at an object (the intentional object). Every belief, desire, etc. has an object that it is about: the believed, the wanted, etc.. Brentano used the expression "intentional inexistence" to indicate the status of the objects of thought in the mind. The property of being intentional, of having an intentional object, was the key feature to distinguish mental phenomena and physical phenomena, because physical phenomena lack intentionality altogether.Through the works of Husserl,
who took it over from Brentano, the concept of intentionality
received more widespread attention in current philosophy, both
continental
and analytic.
French philosopher Jean-Paul
Sartre, in Being
and Nothingness, identified intentionality with consciousness,
stating that they were indistinguishable from one another, a
position that was a stark contrast to Brentano's position that
intentionality is but one quality of mental phenomena. German
philosopher Martin
Heidegger, in Being and
Time, defined intentionality as "care" (Sorge), a sentient condition where an
individual's existentiality,
facticity, and forfeiture to the world identifies their ontological significance, in
contrast to that which is the mere ontic (thinghood).
Modern views
Other twentieth century philosophers such as Gilbert Ryle and A J Ayer have been critical of Husserl's concept of intentionality and his many layers of consciousness, Ryle insisting that perceiving is not a process and Ayer that describing one's knowledge is not to describe mental processes. The effect of these positions is that consciousness is so fully intentional that the mental act has been emptied of all content and the idea of pure consciousness is that it is nothing (Sartre also referred to "consciousness" as "nothing").Platonist
Roderick
Chisholm has revived the Brentano thesis through linguistic
analysis, distinguishing two parts to Brentano's concept, the
ontological aspect and the psychological aspect. Chisholm's
writings have attempted to summarize the suitable and unsuitable
criteria of the concept since the Scholastics, arriving at a
criterion of intentionality identified by the two aspects of
Brentano's thesis and defined by the logical properties that
distinguish language describing psychological phenomena from
language describing non-psychological phenomena. Chisholm's
criteria for the intentional use of sentences are: existence
independence, truth-value indifference, and referential
opacity.
In current artificial
intelligence and philosophy
of mind intentionality is a controversial subject and sometimes
claimed to be something that a machine will never achieve. John Searle
argued for this position with the Chinese room
thought experiment, according to which no syntactic operations that
occurred in a computer would provide it with semantic content. As he noted
in the article, Searle's view was a minority position in artificial
intelligence and philosophy of mind.
Daniel
Dennett offers a taxonomy of the current theories of
intentionality in Chapter 10 of his book "The
Intentional Stance". Most, if not all, current theories on
intentionality accept Brentano's thesis of the irreducibility of
intentional idiom. From this thesis two positions emerge: (1) that
intentional idiom is problematic for science and (2) that
intentional idiom is not problematic for science. Chisholm (1956),
Anscombe (1957), Geach (1957), and Taylor (1964) all adhere to the
former position, namely that intentional idiom is problematic and
cannot be integrated with the natural sciences. Members of this
category also maintain realism in regard to intentional objects,
which may imply some kind of dualism (though this is
debatable).
The latter position, which maintains the unity of
intentionality with the natural sciences, is further divided into
three standpoints: (A) Eliminative
Materialism, supported by W.V. Quine
(1960) and Churchland (1981), (B) Realism,
advocated by Jerry Fodor
(1975), as well as Burge, Dretske, Kripke, and the early Hilary
Putnam, and (C) those who adhere to the Quinean Double
Standard. Proponents of A, the eliminative materialists, understand
intentional idiom, such as "belief", "desire", and the like, to be
replaceable either with behavioristic language (e.g. Quine) or with
the language of neuroscience (e.g. Churchland). Holders of B, the
realists, argue, in contrast to those in support of C, that there
is a deeper fact of the matter to both translation and belief
attribution. In other words, manuals for translating one language
into another cannot be set up in different yet behaviorally
identical ways and ontologically there are intentional objects.
Famously, Fodor has attempted to ground such realist claims about
intentionality in a language of thought. Dennett comments on this
issue, Fodor "attempt[s] to make these irreducible realities
acceptable to the physical sciences by grounding them (somehow) in
the 'syntax' of a system of physically realized mental
representations" (Dennett 1987, 345).
Those who adhere to position C, the Quinean
double standard (namely that ontologically there is nothing
intentional, but that the language of intentionality is
indispensable), accept Quine's thesis of the
indeterminacy of radical translation and its implications,
while the other positions so far mentioned do not. As Quine puts
it, indeterminacy of radical translation is the thesis that
"manuals for translating one language into another can be set up in
divergent ways, all compatible with the totality of speech
dispositions, yet incompatible with one another" (Quine 1960, 27).
Quine (1960) and Wilfrid
Sellars (1958) both comment on this intermediary position. One
such implication would be that there is, in principle, no deeper
fact of the matter that could settle two interpretative strategies
on what belief to attribute to a physical system. In other words,
the behavior (including speech dispositions) of any physical
system, in theory, could be interpreted by two different predictive
strategies and both would be equally warranted in their belief
attribution. This category can be seen to be a medial position
between the realists and the eliminativists since it attempts to
blend attributes of both into a theory of intentionality. Dennett,
for example, argues in "True Believers" (1981) that intentional
idiom (or "folk
psychology") is a predictive strategy and if such a strategy
successfully and voluminously predicts the actions of a physical
system, then that physical system can be said to have those beliefs
attributed to it. Dennett calls this predictive strategy the
intentional
stance.
Position C is further divided into two: (i)
adherence to the Normative Principle and (ii) adherence to the
Projective Principle. The latter is advocated by Grandy (1973) and
Stich (1980, 1981, 1983, 1984), who maintain that attributions of
intentional idioms to any physical system (e.g. humans, artifacts,
non-human animals, etc.) should be the propositional attitude (e.g.
"belief", "desire", etc.) that one would suppose one would have in
the same circumstances (Dennett 1987, 343).
Advocates of the former, the Normative Principle,
argue that attributions of intentional idioms to physical systems
should be the propositional attitudes that the physical system
ought to have in those circumstances (Dennett 1987, 342). However,
exponents of this view are still further divided into those who
make an Assumption of Rationality and those who adhere to the
Principle of Charity. Dennett (1969, 1971, 1975), Cherniak (1981,
1986), and the late Putnam (1983) recommend the Assumption of
Rationality, which unsurprisingly assumes that the physical system
in question is rational. Donald
Davidson (1967, 1973, 1974, 1985) and Lewis (1974) defend the
Principle of Charity.
Intentionality vs. intensionality
Intentionality should not be confused with intensionality, a concept from semantics though it is related to the modern understanding of intention.See also
- Alexius Meinong
- A J Ayer
- consciousness
- superintelligence
- Daniel Dennett
- Gilbert Ryle
- Intention
- Jean-Paul Sartre
- Antonio Millan-Puelles
- John Searle
- Martin Heidegger
- mind-body problem
- Roderick Chisholm
- Thomas Nagel
- Wilfrid Sellars
- Ruth Millikan
References
- Chisholm, Roderick M. "Intentionality" in The Encyclopedia of Philosophy. MacMillan, N.Y., 1967.
- Chisholm, Roderick M. "Notes on the Logic of Believing". Philosophy and Phenomenological Research. Vol. 24: 195-201, 1963.
- Chisholm, Roderick M. Perceiving: A Philosophical Study. Ithaca, N.Y., 1957.
- Dennett, Daniel C. "The Intentional Stance". Massachusetts: Cambridge, 1987.
- Husserl, Edmund. Ideas: General Introduction to Pure Phenomenology.
- Husserl, Edmund. Logical Investigations.
- Malle, B. F., Moses, L. J., & Baldwin, D. A. (Eds.). Intentions and intentionality: Foundations of social cognition. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, ISBN 0-262-13386-5.
- Mohanty, Jitendra Nath. The Concept of Intentionality: A Critical Study. St. Louis, MO: Warren H. Green, 1972.
- Quine, W.V. "Word and Object". Massachusetts: Cambridge, 1960.
Further reading
- Davidson, Donald. "Truth and Meaning". Synthese, XVII, pp. 304-23. 1967.
- Fodor, J. "The Language of Thought". Hassocks, Sussex: Harvester Press; Scranton, PA: Crowell, 1975.
- Sajama, Seppo & Kamppinen, Matti. Historical Introduction to Phenomenology. New York, NY: Croom Helm, 1987.
- Stich, Stephen. "Relativism, Rationality, and the Limits of Intentional Description". Pacific Philosophical Quarterly, 65, pp.211-35. 1984.
External links
- Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy:
intentionality in Czech: Intence
intentionality in German: Intentionalität
intentionality in Estonian:
Intentsionaalsus
intentionality in Spanish: Intencionalidad
intentionality in French: Intentionnalité
intentionality in Ido: Intenco
intentionality in Icelandic: Íbyggni
intentionality in Italian: Intenzionalità
intentionality in Dutch: Intentionaliteit
intentionality in Polish: Intencjonalność
intentionality in Russian:
Интенциональность
intentionality in Finnish:
Intentionaalisuus
intentionality in Ukrainian:
Інтенціональність
intentionality in Chinese: 意向性