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105Real is the new sexy: the influence of perceived realness on self-reported arousal to sexual visual stimuliCognition and Emotion 38 (3): 348-360. 2024.As state-of-art technology can create artificial images that are indistinguishable from real ones, it is urgent to understand whether believing that a picture is real or not has some import over affective phenomena such as sexual arousal. Thus, in two pre-registered online studies, we tested whether 60 images depicting models in underwear elicited higher self-reported sexual arousal when believed to be (N = 57) or presented as (N = 108) real photographs as opposed to artificially generated. In b…Read more
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6There’s Nothing Like Being FreeIn Andy Clark, Julian Kiverstein & Tillmann Vierkant (eds.), Decomposing the Will, Oxford University Press Usa. pp. 136-159. 2013.We know reliably and immediately when acting and deciding freely, instead of being coerced. But how do we know? A common answer posits something in our experience that signals us when we are free—some extra phenomenological ingredient that is present in free behavior and absent in coercion. This chapter argues that the exact opposite is true. There is no specific feeling associated with free action or decision, whereas there are various phenomenological correlates of coercion, and the absence of…Read more
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65Hample, Paglieri, and Na’s model of argument engagement proposes that people en-gage in arguments when they perceive the benefits of arguing to be greater than the costs of doing so. This paper tests the model in Romania, a different culture than the one in which the model was developed, by using a 2 x 2 design.
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99Expropriated Minds: On Some Practical Problems of Generative AI, Beyond Our Cognitive IllusionsPhilosophy and Technology 37 (2): 1-30. 2024.This paper discusses some societal implications of the most recent and publicly discussed application of advanced machine learning techniques: generative AI models, such as ChatGPT (text generation) and DALL-E (text-to-image generation). The aim is to shift attention away from conceptual disputes, e.g. regarding their level of intelligence and similarities/differences with human performance, to focus instead on practical problems, pertaining the impact that these technologies might have (and alr…Read more
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169Enthymematic parsimonySynthese 178 (3). 2011.Enthymemes are traditionally defined as arguments in which some elements are left unstated. It is an empirical fact that enthymemes are both enormously frequent and appropriately understood in everyday argumentation. Why is it so? We outline an answer that dispenses with the so called "principle of charity", which is the standard notion underlying most works on enthymemes. In contrast, we suggest that a different force drives enthymematic argumentation—namely, parsimony, i.e. the tendency to opt…Read more
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131Enthymemes: From Reconstruction to Understanding (review)Argumentation 25 (2): 127-139. 2011.Traditionally, an enthymeme is an incomplete argument, made so by the absence of one or more of its constituent statements. An enthymeme resolution strategy is a set of procedures for finding those missing elements, thus reconstructing the enthymemes and restoring its meaning. It is widely held that a condition on the adequacy of such procedures is that statements restored to an enthymeme produce an argument that is good in some given respect in relation to which the enthymeme itself is bad. In …Read more
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47Accepted by whom? On the Empirical Roots of Aristotle's DialecticRevue Internationale de Philosophie 270 (4): 393-402. 2014.
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132Bogency and Goodacies: On Argument Quality in Virtue Argumentation TheoryInformal Logic 35 (4): 65-87. 2015.Virtue argumentation theory has been charged of being incomplete, given its alleged inability to account for argument cogency in virtue-theoretical terms. Instead of defending VAT against that challenge, I suggest it is misplaced, since it is based on a premise VAT does not endorse, and raises an issue that most versions of VAT need not consider problematic. This in turn allows distinguishing several varieties of VAT, and clarifying what really matters for them.
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6998The Fake, the Flimsy, and the Fallacious: Demarcating Arguments in Real LifeArgumentation 29 (4). 2015.Philosophers of science have given up on the quest for a silver bullet to put an end to all pseudoscience, as such a neat formal criterion to separate good science from its contenders has proven elusive. In the literature on critical thinking and in some philosophical quarters, however, this search for silver bullets lives on in the taxonomies of fallacies. The attractive idea is to have a handy list of abstract definitions or argumentation schemes, on the basis of which one can identify bad or …Read more
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31La disinformazione felice: cosa ci insegnano le bufaleIl mulino. 2020.Elefanti nani, inesistenti regni medievali, parodie politiche scambiate per vere, panzane virali e dibattiti privi di senso sui social media. Le bufale un tempo erano oggetto di curiosità, bizzarri orpelli della credulità umana di cui discutere fra il serio e il faceto. Oggi causano allarme sociale, come ci dimostra la cronaca recente: la baraonda digitale prodotta dal diffondersi di un'epidemia può minare alla radice i tentativi di combatterla, o al contrario facilitare una risposta colletti…Read more
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68All We Need Is Trust: How the COVID-19 Outbreak Reconfigured Trust in Italian Public InstitutionsFrontiers in Psychology 11 561747. 2020.The central focus of this research is the fast and crucial impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, and its exceptionally serious consequences in terms of healthcare, state intervention and impositions, radical changes in people’s life, on a crucial psychological, relational, and political construct: trust. In this survey, addressed to 4260 Italian citizens, we tried to analyze and measure such impact, focusing on various aspects of trust. This attention to multiple dimensions of trust constitutes the k…Read more
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27Response to my commentatorProceedings of the Ontario Society for the Study of Argumentation Conference 10. 2013.N/A.
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56Introduction: Theoretical and Technological Perspectives on Online ArgumentsPhilosophy and Technology 30 (2): 131-135. 2017.
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6The psychology of argument: Cognitive approaches to argumentation and persuasion (edited book)College Publications. 2016.
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Consciousness in interaction: the role of the natural and social context in shaping consciousness (edited book)John Benjamins. 2012.
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128Intentions: Philosophical and Empirical IssuesTopoi 33 (1): 1-3. 2014.This topos is focused on intentions, with an emphasis on integrating philosophical analysis and empirical findings. Theorizing about human action has a long history in philosophy, and the nature of intention and intentional action has received a lot of attention in recent analytic philosophy. At the same time, intentional action has become an empirically studied phenomenon in psychology, cognitive neuroscience, artificial intelligence, and robotics. Many results obtained in these areas have been…Read more
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119Reflections on PlagiarismTopoi 34 (1): 1-5. 2015.The FactsIt has recently come to light that an article published on this journal in 2007, “On the illuminationist approach to imaginal power: outline of a perspective”, by Mahmoud Khatami, Topoi, 26, 221–229, extensively plagiarized parts of Mikel Dufrenne’s book The phenomenology of aesthetic experience . Entire passages from Sect. 4 of Khatami’s article turned out to be copied from chapter 11 of Dufrenne’s monograph, which was not even included in the list of references. This case of plagiaris…Read more
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84Consciousness in Interaction: The role of the natural and social context in shaping consciousness (edited book)John Benjamins Publishing. 2012.Modes of action readiness Acceptance accepting presence or interaction Non- acceptance not accepting presence or interaction Attending acquiring information Disinterest not acquiring information Affiliate achieving or accepting close ...
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117The illusionist and the folk: On the role of conscious planning in intentionality judgmentsPhilosophical Psychology 29 (6): 871-888. 2016.Illusionism is a prominent hypothesis about action control, according to which acts that we consider voluntary are nevertheless caused by unconscious brain events, and thus our subjective experience of consciously willing them is ultimately illusory. Illusionism can be understood as either an ontological thesis or a phenomenological claim, but both versions are vulnerable to a line of attack based on the role of long-term planning in action control. According to this objection, the evidence upon…Read more
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The intentions between philosophy and cognitive science notes on the conference intentions: Philosophical and empirical issues, Rome, 29-30 november 2012 (review)Rivista di Filosofia Neo-Scolastica 104 (4): 777-783. 2012.
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6New Views on Old Issues: The CNCC Essay Award for Junior ScholarsPSYCHE: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Research On Consciousness 15 (1). 2009.
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88A Plea for Ecological Argument TechnologiesPhilosophy and Technology 30 (2): 209-238. 2017.In spite of significant research efforts, argument technologies do not seem poised to scale up as much as most commentators would hope or even predict. In this paper, I discuss what obstacles bar the way to more widespread success of argument technologies and venture some suggestions on how to circumvent such difficulties: doing so will require a significant shift in how this research area is typically understood and practiced. I begin by exploring a much broader yet closely related question: To…Read more
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138False belief understanding and “cool” inhibitory control in 3-and 4-years-old Italian childrenFrontiers in Psychology 6. 2015.
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