•  447
    Broadening the Mind
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 58 (1): 223-231. 1998.
    The main topic of Jerry Fodor’s The Elm and the Expert,1, and the title of the first chapter, is “If Psychological processes are computational, how can psychological laws be intentional?” I focus on the first and second chapters; The first is devoted to setting up the question, the second to answering it
  •  225
    Shifting situations and shaken attitudes
    with Jon Barwise
    Linguistics and Philosophy 8 (1): 105--161. 1985.
  •  53
    ”Self-beliefs” are beliefs of the sort one ordinarily has about oneself, and expresses with the first person. These contrast with the beliefs one has in ”Casta˜neda cases,” in which one has a belief about oneself without knowing it. This paper advances an account of the nature of self-belief. According to this account, self-belief is a special case of interacting with things via notions that serve as repositories for information about objects with certain important relations to the knower, and a…Read more
  •  19
    Interfacing Situations
    with Elizabeth Macken
    In Jerry Seligman & Dag Westerstahl (eds.), Logic, Language and Computation, Center For the Study of Language and Inf. pp. 1--443. 1996.
  •  93
    Fodor and psychological explanation
    with David J. Israel
    In Barry M. Loewer (ed.), Meaning in Mind: Fodor and His Critics, Blackwell. 1990.
    [In Meaning in Mind, edited by Barry Loewer and Georges Rey. Oxford: Basil Black- well, 1991, 165.