Singular thought: object-files, person-files, and the sortal PERSON

Top Cogn Sci. 2014 Oct;6(4):632-46. doi: 10.1111/tops.12110. Epub 2014 Aug 26.

Abstract

In philosophy, "singular thought" refers to our capacity to represent entities as individuals, rather than as possessors of properties. Philosophers who defend singularism argue that perception allows us to mentally latch onto objects and persons directly, without conceptualizing them as being of a certain sort. Singularists assume that singular thought forms a unified psychological kind, regardless of the nature of the individuals represented. Empirical findings on the special psychological role of persons as opposed to inanimates threaten singularism. They raise the possibility that tracking individuals specifically as persons might require conceptualizing them in certain ways, for example, as persons. In this paper, we take such a possibility seriously but ultimately reject it. Instead, we propose to revise a prominent singularist theory, the theory of mental files, in order to accommodate data on the psychological distinctiveness of persons: We advocate the postulation of perceptual person-files. Perceptual tracking via person-files is different from object-tracking but also from descriptive classification under the sortal concept PERSON.

Keywords: Agent-files; Mental files; Object-files; Perceptual tracking; Person-files; Singular thought.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Recognition, Psychology / physiology*
  • Social Perception
  • Theory of Mind / physiology
  • Thinking / physiology*