•  1198
    Taste and Acquaintance
    with Jon Robson
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 73 (2): 127-139. 2015.
    The analogy between gustatory taste and critical or aesthetic taste plays a recurring role in the history of aesthetics. Our interest in this article is in a particular way in which gustatory judgments are frequently thought to be analogous to critical judgments. It appears obvious to many that to know how a particular object tastes we must have tasted it for ourselves; the proof of the pudding, we are all told, is in the eating. And it has seemed just as obvious to many philosophers that aesthe…Read more
  •  313
    Emotions, fiction, and cognitive architecture
    British Journal of Aesthetics 43 (1): 18-34. 2003.
    Recent theorists suggest that our capacity to respond affectively to fictions depends on our ability to engage in simulation: either simulating a character in the fiction, or simulating someone reading or watching the fiction as though it were fact. We argue that such accounts are quite successful at accounting for many of the basic explananda of our affective engagements in fiction. Nonetheless, we argue further that simulationist accounts ultimately fail, for simulation involves an ineliminabl…Read more
  •  3275
    Aesthetic Adjectives: Experimental Semantics and Context-Sensitivity
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 94 (2). 2017.
    One aim of this essay is to contribute to understanding aesthetic communication—the process by which agents aim to convey thoughts and transmit knowledge about aesthetic matters to others. Our focus will be on the use of aesthetic adjectives in aesthetic communication. Although theorists working on the semantics of adjectives have developed sophisticated theories about gradable adjectives, they have tended to avoid studying aesthetic adjectives—the class of adjectives that play a central role in…Read more
  •  1363
    Videogames and the First Person
    with Jon Robson
    In Gregory Currie, Petr Kot̓átko & Martin Pokorny (eds.), Mimesis: Metaphysics, Cognition, Pragmatics, College Publications. 2012.
  •  169
    The Cluster Account of Art Reconsidered
    British Journal of Aesthetics 47 (4): 388-400. 2007.
    Berys Gaut has recently articulated and defended a putatively anti-definitional ‘cluster’ theory of art. In the first part of this paper, I argue that Gaut's version of the cluster account is flawed. The key notion of ‘counting toward the application of a concept’ is formulated in such a way that a range of apparently irrelevant properties will count as criterial for the concept of art. Moreover, there does not appear to be any quick fix to this problem. I then turn to an exploration of the rela…Read more
  • Relevance and the Philosophy of Art
    Dissertation, Rutgers the State University of New Jersey - New Brunswick. 2000.
    This dissertation explores the notion of relevance as it appears in debates within the philosophy of art. ;Chapter one begins by exploring the extent to which notions of relevance inform many of the central debates within the philosophy of art. I distinguish some contexts in which questions about relevance arise and show that there are at least two importantly distinct notions of relevance that get referred to in the literature---a metaphysical notion and an epistemological notion. Chapter two a…Read more
  •  179
    Aesthetic concepts: Essays after Sibley (review)
    British Journal of Aesthetics 44 (1): 90-93. 2004.
  •  40
    The Routledge Companion to Comics (edited book)
    with Frank Bramlett and Roy T. Cook
    Routledge. 2016.
    This cutting-edge handbook brings together an international roster of scholars to examine many facets of comics and graphic novels. Contributor essays provide authoritative, up-to-date overviewsof the major topics and questions within comic studies, offering readers a truly global approach to understanding the field.
  •  229
    The Philosophy of Comics
    Philosophy Compass 6 (12): 854-864. 2011.
    Comics have been around since the 19th century, but it is only just recently that they have begun to receive philosophical attention as an art form in their own right. This essay begins by exploring the reasons for their comparative neglect by philosophers of art and then provides an overview of extant work on the philosophy of comics. The primary issues discussed are the definition of comics, the ontology of comics, the relationship between comics and other art forms, the relationship between t…Read more
  •  91
    The aesthetics of comics
    British Journal of Aesthetics 41 (4): 446-449. 2001.
  •  5
    Fiction and Fictional Worlds in Videogames
    with Jon Robson
    In J. R. Sageng, T. M. Larsen & H. Fossheim (eds.), The Philosophy of Computer Games, Springer. pp. 201-18. 2012.
  •  2768
    Aesthetic Adjectives Lack Uniform Behavior
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 59 (6): 618-631. 2016.
    The goal of this short paper is to show that esthetic adjectives—exemplified by “beautiful” and “elegant”—do not pattern stably on a range of linguistic diagnostics that have been used to taxonomize the gradability properties of adjectives. We argue that a plausible explanation for this puzzling data involves distinguishing two properties of gradable adjectives that have been frequently conflated: whether an adjective’s applicability is sensitive to a comparison class, and whether an adjective’s…Read more