Prisbevakning
Få notis vid prissänkningAv: Philip Pettit
Lägsta pris
Bokus

1 295 kr
Amazon
Bokbörsen
Vi har hittat boken hos 3 butiker med verifierade priser — alla är partnerbutiker som vi får provision från när du klickar på ”Visa hos butik”. Vissa butiker visas som extern länk utan pris — priset ser du först hos butiken. Priset för dig är detsamma. Frakt kan tillkomma och varierar mellan butiker och leveranssätt — kontrollera alltid aktuellt pris och leveransvillkor hos butiken innan du slutför köpet.
Skriver du om boken på en blogg eller sajt? .
Priset har nyligen gått ner jämfört med butikens eget tidigare pris.
Det lägsta priset vi sett för boken sedan Booki började mäta.
Billigaste butiken ligger under de övriga butikernas medianpris just nu — en jämförelse mellan butiker, inte ett prisfall över tid.
Butiken med lägst pris i prislistan på boksidan just nu.
When Minds Converse argues that we do not speak because our human minds are special; our minds are special because we can speak. It maintains that six capacities characteristic of our species emerge as social skills in conversing with one another and that we internalize those skills in mentally communing with ourselves in thought. Philip Pettit defends a society-first view of the human mind and more broadly, the human soul, gesturing at how this philosophical anthropology can support universal ideals of equality, respect and freedom.Three of the abilities the book targets involve informational processing. Our capacity to update our beliefs and other attitudes intentionally, seeking out the judgments that we ought to make and the attitudes we ought to hold. Our capacity to rely on intentional reasoning, looking for the grounds on which to support judgments and looking at what our judgments in turn support. And our ability to direct perception intentionally, as we recruit it to the service of those capacities and learn to distinguish between appearance and reality. The other three capacities addressed have a relational character. Our ability to establish and uphold standards and values for one another and for ourselves, making tacit commitments to live by them. Our ability to ascribe and assume accountability, holding one another and ourselves responsible to those norms and values. And our ability to assume the status of persons, embracing the implications of those commitments in the persona we hold out to others, and indeed to ourselves. Pettit offers an empirically informed but philosophical defence of his view. In an extended thought experiment, a conceptual genealogy, he explores the likely, unplanned effects that the first appearance of language would have on the minds of humanoid creatures otherwise like us. The argument is that they would evolve a range of conversive practices and that the skills elicited by those practices are good models of the capacities targeted here. The genealogy does not try to explain how those practices and skills evolved among our forebears but, relying on the lessons of the thought experiment, seeks to shed light on their nature and role in our social and mental life.
Okej pris
Bokus
43 kr dyrare
Rör sig ofta
Författare
Philip Pettit
Förlag
Oxford University Press
Utgivningsår
2025
Format
Inbunden
Sidantal
358
Språk
Engelska
Dewey
128.2
ISBN
9780198863113
Bokus

1 295 kr
Amazon
Bokbörsen
Vi har hittat boken hos 3 butiker med verifierade priser — alla är partnerbutiker som vi får provision från när du klickar på ”Visa hos butik”. Vissa butiker visas som extern länk utan pris — priset ser du först hos butiken. Priset för dig är detsamma. Frakt kan tillkomma och varierar mellan butiker och leveranssätt — kontrollera alltid aktuellt pris och leveransvillkor hos butiken innan du slutför köpet.
Skriver du om boken på en blogg eller sajt? .
Priset har nyligen gått ner jämfört med butikens eget tidigare pris.
Det lägsta priset vi sett för boken sedan Booki började mäta.
Billigaste butiken ligger under de övriga butikernas medianpris just nu — en jämförelse mellan butiker, inte ett prisfall över tid.
Butiken med lägst pris i prislistan på boksidan just nu.
When Minds Converse argues that we do not speak because our human minds are special; our minds are special because we can speak. It maintains that six capacities characteristic of our species emerge as social skills in conversing with one another and that we internalize those skills in mentally communing with ourselves in thought. Philip Pettit defends a society-first view of the human mind and more broadly, the human soul, gesturing at how this philosophical anthropology can support universal ideals of equality, respect and freedom.Three of the abilities the book targets involve informational processing. Our capacity to update our beliefs and other attitudes intentionally, seeking out the judgments that we ought to make and the attitudes we ought to hold. Our capacity to rely on intentional reasoning, looking for the grounds on which to support judgments and looking at what our judgments in turn support. And our ability to direct perception intentionally, as we recruit it to the service of those capacities and learn to distinguish between appearance and reality. The other three capacities addressed have a relational character. Our ability to establish and uphold standards and values for one another and for ourselves, making tacit commitments to live by them. Our ability to ascribe and assume accountability, holding one another and ourselves responsible to those norms and values. And our ability to assume the status of persons, embracing the implications of those commitments in the persona we hold out to others, and indeed to ourselves. Pettit offers an empirically informed but philosophical defence of his view. In an extended thought experiment, a conceptual genealogy, he explores the likely, unplanned effects that the first appearance of language would have on the minds of humanoid creatures otherwise like us. The argument is that they would evolve a range of conversive practices and that the skills elicited by those practices are good models of the capacities targeted here. The genealogy does not try to explain how those practices and skills evolved among our forebears but, relying on the lessons of the thought experiment, seeks to shed light on their nature and role in our social and mental life.
Okej pris
Bokus
43 kr dyrare
Rör sig ofta
Författare
Philip Pettit
Förlag
Oxford University Press
Utgivningsår
2025
Format
Inbunden
Sidantal
358
Språk
Engelska
Dewey
128.2
ISBN
9780198863113
ISBN 9780198863113 jämförs hos alla butiker
When Minds Converse argues that we do not speak because our human minds are special; our minds are special because we can speak. It maintains that six capacities characteristic of our species emerge as social skills in conversing with one another and that we internalize those skills in mentally communing with ourselves in thought. Philip Pettit defends a society-first view of the human mind and more broadly, the human soul, gesturing at how this philosophical anthropology can support universal ideals of equality, respect and freedom.Three of the abilities the book targets involve informational processing. Our capacity to update our beliefs and other attitudes intentionally, seeking out the judgments that we ought to make and the attitudes we ought to hold. Our capacity to rely on intentional reasoning, looking for the grounds on which to support judgments and looking at what our judgments in turn support. And our ability to direct perception intentionally, as we recruit it to the service of those capacities and learn to distinguish between appearance and reality. The other three capacities addressed have a relational character. Our ability to establish and uphold standards and values for one another and for ourselves, making tacit commitments to live by them. Our ability to ascribe and assume accountability, holding one another and ourselves responsible to those norms and values. And our ability to assume the status of persons, embracing the implications of those commitments in the persona we hold out to others, and indeed to ourselves. Pettit offers an empirically informed but philosophical defence of his view. In an extended thought experiment, a conceptual genealogy, he explores the likely, unplanned effects that the first appearance of language would have on the minds of humanoid creatures otherwise like us. The argument is that they would evolve a range of conversive practices and that the skills elicited by those practices are good models of the capacities targeted here. The genealogy does not try to explain how those practices and skills evolved among our forebears but, relying on the lessons of the thought experiment, seeks to shed light on their nature and role in our social and mental life.
Okej pris
Bokus
43 kr dyrare
Rör sig ofta
Författare
Philip Pettit
Förlag
Oxford University Press
Utgivningsår
2025
Format
Inbunden
Sidantal
358
Språk
Engelska
ISBN
9780198863113
Det lägsta priset just nu är 1269 kr hos Adlibris, av 3 butiker vi jämför. Priser ändras löpande – kontrollera alltid slutpris och frakt hos butiken innan köp.
Priserna uppdateras automatiskt, vanligtvis minst en gång per dygn. Senaste registrerade uppdatering: 5 juli 2026.
Varje butik sätter sitt eget pris och kör olika kampanjer, så samma bok kan kosta olika mycket. Sverige har fri prissättning på böcker – därför lönar det sig att jämföra, och här ser du priserna samlade på ett ställe.
Nej. Priset vi visar är butikens bokpris – fraktkostnad tillkommer och varierar mellan butiker (flera erbjuder fri frakt över en viss summa). Den slutliga fraktkostnaden ser du i butikens kassa innan du betalar.
Ja. Sätt en kostnadsfri prisbevakning så får du besked när priset faller. Du kan också följa prisutvecklingen i prishistoriken här på sidan.
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