July 4, 2000
In August 1999 Professor Jeff Coulter from Boston University visited Tokyo and Kyoto to hold a seminar and lectures. This visit was sponsored by the Institute for Sociology and Social Work at Meiji Gakuin University. Many thanks to all the participants in the seminar and lectures. [AN]
Schedule
- Wednesday 4th to Friday 6th (at Meiji Gakuin University)
Seminar: Mind, Brain and Conduct: The Perspective of Wittgensteinian Ethnomethodolgy
- Saturday 7th (at Wasead University)
Lecture: Wittgenstein and Garfinkel
- Sunday 8th (at Seijo University)
Lecture: The mind of John Searle
- Monday 9th (at Kyodai Kaikan, Kyoto)
Lecture: Procedural Explanation, Grammar and Ethnomethodology
Jeff Coulter's Report on his Seminar and Lectures
- August 4th (at Meiji Gakuin): "ETHNOMETHODOLOGY AND THE 'MICRO-MACRO' PROBLEM".
In this lecture, I tried to show how the analysis of the use of
'macro-'concepts in ordinary communications between people can help to
resolve many of the problems raised by efforts to study so-called "macro" phenomena in a rigorous way. This approach also provides an antidote to many misconceptions about so-called 'levels' of social reality - the micro and the macro.
- August 5th (at Meiji Gakuin): "CONCEPTUAL ANALYSIS AND NEUROPSYCHOLOGY". In this lecture, I attempted to rebut the 'neurophilosophy' of the Churchlands and to show that one can disentangle metaphysical interpretations from plain neurobiological facts using conceptual analysis. Included in this lecture was a sustained re-analysis of several contemporary claims advanced in the hybrid field called 'cognitive' neuroscience.
- August 6th (at Meiji Gakuin): "NEURAL CAUSATION AND 'FREEDOM OF ACTION'> In this presnetations, I re-analysed the famous Kornhuber-Liber experiment and tried to show that the exercise of 'free will' is not eliminable by reference to neurophysiological causation of bodily behaviors. In addition, I argued that freedom of action is intelligible in various contexts and does not contravene causal explanations of such behaviors.
- August 7th (at Waseda): "WITTGENSTEIN AND GARFINKEL". In this lecture, I tried to show how many of Garfinkel's major insights are complementary to those of the later Wittgenstein, and that ethnomethodological studies should be treated as elucidations of the - logical - properties of human activities and practices.
- August 8th (at Seijo): "THE MIND OF JOHN SEARLE". In this
presentation, I advanced a critique of several of John Searle's arguments, whilst endorsing his 'Chinese Room' gedankenexperiment. This work is part of a collaborative project with Professort Wes Sharrock (University of Manchester, England) and is due to be published soon.
- August 9th (at Kyoto): "PROCEDURAL EXPLANATION, GRAMMAR AND
ETHNOMETHODOLOGY". Building on the lecture at Waseda, I sought to argue that ethnomethodological explanations are procedural, and that grammatical analyses are as well. From here, I tried to argue that ethnomethodological work is best construed as a contribution to the elucidation of the constitutive rules which govern the intelligibility of our lives.
Jeff Coulter's Main Publications
- Approaches to Insanity (John Wiley, 1973).
- The Social Construction of Mind: Studies in Ethnomethodology and Linguistic Philosophy (Macmillan, 1979).
- Rethinking Cognitive Theory (Macmillan, 1983).
- Mind in Action (Polity, 1989).
- Computers, Minds and Conduct (Polity, 1995, with G. Butt
on, J. Lee, and W. Sharrock).
- And others