Explorations of the (Meta) Representational Status of Desire in the Theory-Theory of Mind Framework
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Leo Ferres
Abstract
Some researchers have proposed that what accounts for children's earlier ability to reason by means of desire compared to reasoning by means of belief is the fact that desires do not necessarily invoke the ability to metarep-resent. In this paper, I argue that this is a misconception stemming from the confusion between desire as-cription and simple desire states. In other words, there would be no way to entertain a thought about some-one's desire without metarepresenting, in Leslie's (1991) terms. I provide some empirical evidence in the fashion of Bartsch and Wellman (1995) that also points in this direction.
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