Having the World in View
Essays on Kant, Hegel, and Sellars
John McDowell
- Sellars on Perceptual Experience
- The Logical Form of an Intuition
- Intentionality as a Relation
- Hegel’s Idealism as a Radicalization of Kant
- Self-Determining Subjectivity and External Constraint
- Sensory Consciousness in Kant and Sellars
- Conceptual Capacities in Perception
- The Apperceptive I and the Empirical Self: Towards a Heterodox Reading of “Lordship and Bondage” in Hegel’s Phenomenology
- Towards a Reading of Hegel on Action in the “Reason” Chapter of the Phenomenology
- On Pippin’s Postscript
- The Constitutive Ideal of Rationality: Davidson and Sellars
- Why is Sellars’s Essay Called “Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind”?
- Sellars’s Thomism
- Avoiding the Myth of the Given
I. Having the World in View: Sellars, Kant, and Intentionality
II. Kantian Themes in Hegel and Sellars
III. Reading Hegel
IV. Sellarsian Themes
- Bibliography
- Credits
- Index


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