Mind (journal)

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Mind  
Mind (journal).gif
Discipline Philosophy
Language English
Edited by Thomas Baldwin
Publication details
Publisher Oxford University Press (UK)
Publication history 1876–present
Frequency Quarterly
Indexing
ISSN 0026-4423 (print)
1460-2113 (web)
LCCN sn98-23315
OCLC number 40463594
Links

Mind is a British journal, currently published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Mind Association, which deals with philosophy in the analytic tradition. It was founded in 1876 by the Scottish philosopher and Regius Professor of Logic Alexander Bain at the University of Aberdeen with his colleague and former student George Croom Robertson as Editor based at University College London. With the death of Robertson in 1891, George Stout took over the editorship and began a 'New Series'. The current editor is Professor Thomas Baldwin of the University of York.

Although the journal now focuses on analytic philosophy, it began as a journal dedicated to the question of whether psychology could be a legitimate natural science. In the first issue, Robertson wrote:

"Now, if there were a journal that set itself to record all advances in psychology, and gave encouragement to special researches by its readiness to publish them, the uncertainty hanging over the subject could hardly fail to be dispelled. Either psychology would in time pass with general consent into the company of the sciences, or the hollowness of its pretensions would be plainly revealed. Nothing less, in fact, is aimed at in the publication of Mind than to procure a decision of this question as to the scientific standing of psychology."[1]

Many famous essays have been published in Mind from such figures as Charles Darwin, J. M. E. McTaggart and Noam Chomsky. Three of the most famous, arguably, are Lewis Carroll's "What the Tortoise Said to Achilles (1895), Bertrand Russell's "On Denoting" (1905), and Alan Turing's "Computing Machinery and Intelligence" (1950), in which he first proposed the Turing test.

Contents

[edit] Editors

1876–1891 George Croom Robertson
1891–1920 George Frederic Stout
1921–1947 George Edward Moore
1947–1972 Gilbert Ryle
1972–1984 David Hamlyn
1984–1990 Simon Blackburn
1990–2000 Mark Sainsbury
2000–2005 Mike Martin
2005- Thomas Baldwin

[edit] Notable articles

[edit] late 19th century

[edit] early 20th century

[edit] mid 20th century

[edit] late 20th century

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Robertson, "Prefatory Words," Mind, 1 (1): 1876, p. 3; quoted at Alexander Klein, The Rise of Empiricism: William James, Thomas Hill Green, and the Struggle over Psychology, page 92 [1]

[edit] External links

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