| Burge, T. (1984). Individualism in psychology. Philosophical Review, 95, 3--45. |
....nothing internal to the system that gives the symbols any meaning. If this is true, then computers stand in clear contrast to humans, whose mental states possess intrinsic meaning. 2. The literature on narrow and wide content started with Putnam (1975) and has been developed by Fodor (1980) and Burge (1984), among many others. 3. It should be noted that an internalist view on content does not preclude content from being a referential notion. A mental state may possess internalist semantic content by virtue of reference to some object or concept in a subject s notional world (Dennett, 1982) rather ....
Burge, T. (1984). Individualism in psychology. Philosophical Review, 95, 3--45.
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