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  1. In philosophy one of the chief advocates of this view is Gilbert Ryle *, a British philosopher whose book, The Concept of Mind, had a dramatic impact on Western thought. Ryle’s behaviorism was a different sort from that of psychology.

  2. Dec 18, 2007 · 1. Biography. 2. Philosophy as Cartography. 3. Systematic Ambiguity and Type Trespasses. 4. Concepts, Propositions, and Meaning.

  3. Gilbert Ryle was a British philosopher and a leading figure in the “Oxford philosophy,” or “ordinary language,” movement. Ryle gained first-class honours at Queen’s College, Oxford, and became a lecturer at Christ Church College in 1924.

  4. Feb 21, 2023 · Introduction. Though best known and often identified with his work on concepts of mind, Gilbert Ryle (b. 1900–d. 1976) was no monoglot. He was a broad thinker, with broad influences, invested in various philosophical issues—perhaps chief among them, the status and methods of philosophy itself.

  5. In The Concept of Mind (1949), Ryle argued that the traditional conception of the human mind—that it is an invisible ghostlike entity occupying a physical body—is based on what he called a “category mistake.” The mistake is to interpret the term mind as though it were… Read More. treatment of concepts. In concept.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Gilbert_RyleGilbert Ryle - Wikipedia

    Gilbert Ryle (19 August 1900 – 6 October 1976) was a British philosopher, [7] principally known for his critique of Cartesian dualism, for which he coined the phrase " ghost in the machine ." He was a representative of the generation of British ordinary language philosophers who shared Ludwig Wittgenstein 's approach to ...

  7. May 13, 2013 · This metaphysical Ego, of “mysterious†nature (Ryle, 1984, p. 186) – as Gilbert Ryle describes it – has indubitable self-evidence, provided by an intuition of its own mental processes that only it can access.