University of London
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1995
Heslington, York, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Interest
Normative Ethics
  •  710
    We argue that, while Cavendish did express orthodox piety, she is likely to have been read by her contemporaries as heterodox and deistic at best, atheistic at worst. Furthermore, they would have been right: it is seemingly impossible to reconcile her metaphysical and epistemological views with particular providence, miracles, the incarnation and revelation. We proceed by outlining her general metaphysical position (section 1) before looking in some detail at her discussion of immaterial beings …Read more
  • Introduction
    with Paul Lodge
    In Locke and Leibniz on Substance, Routledge. pp. 1-7. 2014.
    This introduction presents an overview of the key concepts discussed in the subsequent chapters of this book. This chapter examines a variety of different issues that have arisen in connection with the notions of substance employed by Locke and Leibniz and the role that these notions play in their understanding of other issues that have been the focus of recent scholarly debates. Samuel C. Rickless argues that some of the best reasons for thinking that Locke considers persons to be modes, partic…Read more
  • Quine on Quantification and Existence
    Frontiers of Philosophy in China 11 (1): 54-72. 2016.
    Quine’s justly famous paper “On What There Is” introduced a criterion of ontological commitment which has been almost universally accepted by analytic philosophers ever since. In this paper I try to unpack some of the substantive and controversial philosophical commitments that are presupposed by this criterion. The aim is not to show that the criterion is incorrect, but merely that it is not as obvious as it is taken to be by many, and that we might have reasons to explore alternative ways of t…Read more
  • This paper challenges the implied binary division between the specialist historian and the non-historical philosopher by showing how a sub-discipline of philosophy can also be historical. It explores how our actual practices of studying, discussing, teaching and sharing the history of our discipline are theoretically possible, in the restricted sense of being possible while also maintaining our academic, professional and intellectual integrity. Section 1 introduces the problem that actual practi…Read more
  • No one has ever died
    Dialectic 4 18-19. 2009.
    This short paper presents a novel paradox with the conclusion that no one has ever died.
  • George Berkeley published the Principles of Human Knowledge Part 1 in 1710, when he was just 25 years old. He never published the projected Part 2, on free will and the self, claiming to have lost the manuscript while travelling in Italy. Part 1, now known simply as the Principles, defends the apparently shocking thesis that there is no material world; all that exists are immaterial minds and the ideas that are their objects of consciousness. At the stroke of a pen, this bold move did away with …Read more
  • Nightmares and trauma: From narrative to embodied reprocessing
    with Dzmitry Karpuk and R. A. Davies
    The Magazine for Family Therapy and Systemic Practice in the Uk 2019 (116): 36-39. 2019.
  • Nightmares, trauma, and the orthodoxy of narrative
    with R. A. Davies and D. Karpuk
    Perspectives on Trauma 1 (2): 12-32. 2021.
    The prevalent view of dreaming in western culture (the ‘standard view’) has only occasionally been challenged. It suggests dreaming is a perception-like experience that occurs during sleep and is encoded into memory for recall upon waking. A central assumption in therapy for dream symptoms has not been the subject of sustained challenge. It suggests the retelling of dream narratives is required for the treatment of those symptoms. Theories of dreams and their treatment are clinically relevant: …Read more
  • This chapter proposes that Locke’s Of the Conduct of the Understanding (1706) can be read as a precursor to the recent psychological literature on cognitive biases. We begin by examining Locke’s intentions and methods, as well as his conception of human reason as universal. In the second section we briefly look at how Locke’s taxonomy fits with contemporary ones and then in the third look at some of the ways Locke thinks we may end up reasoning from false principles. In section four we concentra…Read more
  • Berkeley and Collier
    In The Oxford Handbook of Berkeley, Oxford University Press. 2021.
    Arthur Collier (1680-1732) was a contemporary of Berkeley’s who also defended a form of immaterialism. The chapter begins with some historical background about Collier’s writings and their reception before considering two challenges to immaterialism – (1) distinguishing perception from imagination and (2) the nature of the perceiving self – where the two immaterialists had strikingly different approaches. While neither of them developed fully adequate accounts of either imagination or the self, …Read more
  • Towards a hybrid approach to unveil the Chimaira of neurosciences: philosophy, aperiodic activity and the neural correlates of consciousness
    with A. I. Ladas, T. Gravalas, and C. A. Frantzidis
    Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 17. 2023.
    Contemporary theories of consciousness, although very efficient in postulating testable hypotheses, seem to either neglect its relational aspect or to have a profound difficulty in operationalizing this aspect in a measurable manner. We further argue that the analysis of periodic brain activity is inadequate to reveal consciousness’s subjective facet. This creates an important epistemic gap in the quest for the neural correlates of consciousness. We suggest a possible solution to bridge this gap…Read more
  •  7
    Risk of What? Defining Harm in the Context of AI Safety
    with L. C. A. Fearnley, E. Cairns, P. M. Ryan, T. A. Chubb, J. Iacovides, C. P. Iglesias Urrutia, P. D. J. Morgan, J. A. McDermid, and I. Habli
    For decades, the field of system safety has designed safe systems by reducing the risk of physical harm to humans, property and the environment to an acceptable level. Recently, this definition of safety has come under scrutiny by governments and researchers who argue that the narrow focus on reducing physical harm, whilst necessary, is not sufficient to secure the safety of AI systems. There is growing pressure to expand the scope of safety in the context of AI to address emerging harms, with p…Read more
  •  1
    This paper addresses the fundamental problem of political philosophy, namely under what conditions is the right to command and subject others to punishment—political power—justified?, in the context of the current concentration of digital services into huge, suprajurisdictional platforms, generically known as “Big Tech”. The original source of political power is traditionally the state, an entity distinct from mere governing institutions. This distinction is dissolving as transnationally dominan…Read more
  •  1
    Responsible and Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence: Standards, Processes and Behaviors
    with U. Wilkens and S. Güldenberg
    Swiss Journal of Business 80. 2026.
    This special issue looks at responsible and Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence: standards, processes and behaviors.
  •  3
    In this chapter we aim to clarify the debate over the particular question of whether there might have been nothing, and the more general question of the nature of modality, by introducing the concept of a Modal Theory and investigating its form. We begin by arguing that the question of whether there might have been nothing can be pursued independently of the question of the nature of possible worlds; that is, we can investigate what possibilities there are without having to investigate what poss…Read more
  •  2
    Berkeley on Abstraction, Universals, and Universal Knowledge
    In Stefano Di Bella & Tad M. Schmaltz (eds.), The Problem of Universals in Early Modern Philosophy, Oup Usa. pp. 267-284. 2017.
    This chapter includes three claims. The first is that while Berkeley treated the metaphysical problem of universals as unproblematically resolved in favor of nominalism (which he interpreted in an extreme form), he recognized the epistemic problem as a separate issue he needed to engage with and this is the primary positive contribution of his attack on abstraction. The second is that his solution to the epistemic problem is semiotic, but his semantics here is anthropocentric and pragmatic (in c…Read more
  •  16
    Dreaming, Phenomenal Character, and Acquaintance
    In Jonathan Knowles & Thomas Raleigh (eds.), Acquaintance: New Essays, Oxford University Press. pp. 145-168. 2019.
    Dreams are often defined as sleeping experiences with phenomenal character similar to perceptions of the real world. Hence they pose a prima facie challenge to accounts of phenomenal character in terms of acquaintance relations. One response is disjunctivist: to give a different account of their phenomenal character from that of successful perceivings. I argue that, given the alleged frequency of dreaming on the standard model, this disjunctivist approach weakens the explanatory value of the acq…Read more
  • Causation and Modern Philosophy (edited book)
    with Allen Kenneth
    Routledge. 2011.
  •  215
    Temporal externalism
    Philosophical Papers 32 (1): 97-107. 2003.
    Abstract Temporal Externalism is the view that future events can contribute to determining the present content of our thoughts and utterances. Two objections to Temporal Externalism are discussed and rejected. The first is that Temporal Externalism has implausible consequences for the epistemology of biology and other taxonomic sciences (Brown, 2000). The second is that it is committed to implausible claims about dispositions
  •  130
    When did Collier read Berkeley?
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 15 (2). 2007.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  53
    Self-knowledge
    In Ilkka Niiniluoto, Matti Sintonen & Jan Woleński (eds.), Handbook of Epistemology, Kluwer Academic. pp. 647--672. 2004.
  •  173
    Catching Berkeley's shadow
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 49 (2): 116-136. 2011.
    Berkeley thinks that we only see the size, shape, location, and orientation of objects in virtue of the correlation between sight and touch. Shadows have all of these spatial properties and yet are intangible. In Seeing Dark Things (2008), Roy Sorensen argues that shadows provide a counterexample to Berkeley's theory of vision and, consequently, to his idealism. This paper shows that Berkeley can accept both that shadows are intangible and that they have spatial properties