•  22
    L'esprit en Mouvement: Essai Sur la Dynamique Cognitive
    Center for the Study of Language and Information Publica Tion. 2001.
  •  81
    Perceptual hysteresis as a marker of perceptual inflexibility in schizophrenia
    with Jean-Rémy Martin, Guillaume Dezecache, Daniel Pressnitzer, Philippe Nuss, Nicolas Bruno, Elisabeth Pacherie, and Nicolas Franck
    Consciousness and Cognition 30 (C): 62-72. 2014.
  •  188
    IV—Aesthetic Experience as a Metacognitive Feeling? A Dual-Aspect View
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 116 (1): 69-88. 2016.
  •  139
    The dynamics of deictic thoughts
    Philosophical Studies 82 (2): 179-204. 1996.
    Defense of a non-psychological dynamics of demonstrative thoughts.
  •  132
    Disjunctivism, Hallucination and Metacognition
    with Jean-Rémy Martin
    WIREs Cognitive Science 3 533-543. 2012.
    Perceptual experiences have been construed either as representational mental states—Representationalism—or as direct mental relations to the external world—Disjunctivism. Both conceptions are critical reactions to the so-called ‘Argument from Hallucination’, according to which perceptions cannot be about the external world, since they are subjectively indiscriminable from other, hallucinatory experiences, which are about sense-data ormind-dependent entities. Representationalism agrees that perce…Read more
  • Ruth K. Millikan, "White Queen Psychology and Other Essays for Alice" (review)
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 3 (2): 373. 1995.
  • Le corps en mouvement: les relations entre l'action, l'intention et le mouvement corporel
    Revue de Théologie Et de Philosophie 124 (3): 249-270. 1992.
  •  302
    The Ontology of Perception: Bipolarity and Content
    Erkenntnis 48 (2): 153-169. 1998.
    The notion of perceptual content is commonly introduced in the analysis of perception. It stems from an analogy between perception and propositional attitudes. Both kinds of mental states, it is thought, have conditions of satisfaction. I try to show that on the most plausible account of perceptual content, it does not determine the conditions under which perceptual experience is veridical. Moreover, perceptual content must be bipolar (capable of being correct and capable of being incorrect), wh…Read more
  •  203
    Our utterances are typically if not always "situated," in the sense that they are true or false relative to unarticulated parameters of the extra-linguistic context. The problem is to explain how these parameters are determined, given that nothing in the uttered sentences indicates them. It is tempting to claim that they must be determined at the level of thought or intention. However, as many philosophers have observed, thoughts themselves are no less situated than utterances. Unarticulated par…Read more