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319Concept‐metacognitionMind and Language 35 (5): 565-582. 2019.Concepts are our tools for thinking. They enable us to engage in explicit reasoning about things in the world. Like physical tools, they can be more or less good, given the ways we use them – more or less dependable for categorisation, learning, induction, action-planning, and so on. Do concept users appreciate, explicitly or implicitly, that concepts vary in dependability? Do they feel that some concepts are in some way defective? If so, we metacognize our concepts. One example that has been st…Read more
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150Functionalist Interrelations Amongst Human Psychological States inter se, ditto for MartiansIn Joulia Smortchkova, Krzysztof Dołęga & Tobias Schlicht (eds.), What Are Mental Representations?, Oxford University Press. pp. 242-253. 2020.One job for theories of mental representation is to distinguish between different kinds of mental representation: beliefs, desires, intentions, perceptual states, etc. What makes a mental state a belief that p rather than a desire that p or a visual representation that p? Functionalism is a leading approach for doing so: for individuating mental states. Functionalism is designed to allow that psychological states can be multiply realized. Mark Sprevak has argued that, for a functionalist accoun…Read more
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170Metacognition and Abstract ConceptsPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B 373. 2018.The problem of how concepts can refer to or be about the non-mental world is particularly puzzling for abstract concepts. There is growing evidence that many characteristics beyond the perceptual are involved in grounding different kinds of abstract concept. A resource that has been suggested, but little explored, is introspection. This paper develops that suggestion by focusing specifically on metacognition—on the thoughts and feelings that thinkers have about a concept. One example of metacogn…Read more
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541Content in Simple Signalling SystemsBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 69 (4): 1009-1035. 2018.Our understanding of communication and its evolution has advanced significantly through the study of simple models involving interacting senders and receivers of signals. Many theorists have thought that the resources of mathematical information theory are all that are needed to capture the meaning or content that is being communicated in these systems. However, the way theorists routinely talk about the models implicitly draws on a conception of content that is richer than bare informational co…Read more
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4501Representation in Cognitive ScienceOxford University Press. 2018.How can we think about things in the outside world? There is still no widely accepted theory of how mental representations get their meaning. In light of pioneering research, Nicholas Shea develops a naturalistic account of the nature of mental representation with a firm focus on the subpersonal representations that pervade the cognitive sciences.
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109Learning rapidly about the relevance of visual cues requires conscious awarenessQuarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 71 (8). 2018.Humans have been shown capable of performing many cognitive tasks using information of which they are not consciously aware. This raises questions about what role consciousness actually plays in cognition. Here, we explored whether participants can learn cue-target contingencies in an attentional learning task when the cues were presented below the level of conscious awareness, and how this differs from learning about conscious cues. Participants’ manual (Experiment 1) and saccadic (Experiment 2…Read more
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184Acquiring a new concept is not explicable-by-contentBehavioral and Brain Sciences 34 (3). 2011.BBS Commentary on: Susan Carey: The Origin of Concepts. Carey’s book describes many cases where children develop new concepts with expressive power that could not be constructed out of their input. How does she side-step Fodor’s paradox of radical concept nativism? I suggest it is by rejecting the tacit assumption that psychology can only explain concept acquisition when it occurs by rational inference or other transitions that are explicable-by-content
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250Short review of Varieties of Meaning, R. G. Millikan (review)Philosophical Review 118 (1): 127-130. 2009.
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97The Information Value of Non-Genetic Inheritance in Plants and AnimalsPLoS ONE 10 (1). 2015.Parents influence the development of their offspring in many ways beyond the transmission of DNA. This includes transfer of epigenetic states, nutrients, antibodies and hormones, and behavioural interactions after birth. While the evolutionary consequences of such nongenetic inheritance are increasingly well understood, less is known about how inheritance mechanisms evolve. Here, we present a simple but versatile model to explore the adaptive evolution of non-genetic inheritance. Our model is ba…Read more
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196Neural mechanisms of decision-making and the personal levelIn K. W. M. Fulford (ed.), Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry, Oxford University Press. pp. 1063-1082. 2012.Can findings from psychology and cognitive neuroscience about the neural mechanisms involved in decision-making can tell us anything useful about the commonly-understood mental phenomenon of making voluntary choices? Two philosophical objections are considered. First, that the neural data is subpersonal, and so cannot enter into illuminating explanations of personal level phenomena like voluntary action. Secondly, that mental properties are multiply realized in the brain in such a way as to m…Read more
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541Inherited representations are read in developmentBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 64 (1): 1-31. 2013.Recent theoretical work has identified a tightly-constrained sense in which genes carry representational content. Representational properties of the genome are founded in the transmission of DNA over phylogenetic time and its role in natural selection. However, genetic representation is not just relevant to questions of selection and evolution. This paper goes beyond existing treatments and argues for the heterodox view that information generated by a process of selection over phylogenetic ti…Read more
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349Developmental Systems Theory Formulated as a Claim about Inherited RepresentationsPhilosophy of Science 78 (1): 60-82. 2011.Developmental Systems Theory (DST) emphasises the importance of non-genetic factors in development and their relevance to evolution. A common, deflationary reaction is that it has long been appreciated that non-genetic factors are causally indispensable. This paper argues that DST can be reformulated to make a more substantive claim: that the special role played by genes is also played by some (but not all) non-genetic resources. That special role is to transmit inherited representations, in the…Read more
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1290The Vegetative State and the Science of ConsciousnessBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 61 (3): 459-484. 2010.Consciousness in experimental subjects is typically inferred from reports and other forms of voluntary behaviour. A wealth of everyday experience confirms that healthy subjects do not ordinarily behave in these ways unless they are conscious. Investigation of consciousness in vegetative state patients has been based on the search for neural evidence that such broad functional capacities are preserved in some vegetative state patients. We call this the standard approach. To date, the results of t…Read more
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88Two Modes of Transgenerational Information TransmissionIn Kim Sterelny, Richard Joyce, Brett Calcott & Ben Fraser (eds.), Cooperation and its Evolution, Mit Press. pp. 289-312. 2013.The explosion of scientific results about epigenetic and other parental effects appears bewilderingly diverse. An important distinction helps to bring order to the data. Firstly, parents can detect adaptively-relevant information and transmit it to their offspring who rely on it to set a plastic phenotype adaptively. Secondly, adaptively-relevant information may be generated by a process of selection on a reliably transmitted parental effect. The distinction is particularly valuable in revealing…Read more
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250Perception versus action: The computations may be the same but the direction of fit differsBehavioral and Brain Sciences 36 (3): 228-229. 2013.Although predictive coding may offer a computational principle that unifies perception and action, states with different directions of fit are involved (with indicative and imperative contents, respectively). Predictive states are adjusted to fit the world in the course of perception, but in the case of action, the corresponding states act as a fixed target towards which the agent adjusts the world. This well-recognised distinction helps side-step some problems discussed in the target article
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1671Methodological Encounters with the Phenomenal KindPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 84 (2): 307-344. 2011.Block’s well-known distinction between phenomenal consciousness and access consciousness has generated a large philosophical literature about putative conceptual connections between the two. The scientific literature about whether they come apart in any actual cases is rather smaller. Empirical evidence gathered to date has not settled the issue. Some put this down to a fundamental methodological obstacle to the empirical study of the relation between phenomenal consciousness and access consciou…Read more
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375Getting Clear about Equivocal Concepts (review)Disputatio 1 (13). 2002.Just how far can externalism go? In this exciting new book Ruth Millikan explores a radically externalist treatment of empirical concepts (Millikan 2000). For the last thirty years philosophy of mind’s ties to meaning internalism have been loosened. The theory of content has swung uncomfortably on its moorings in a fickle current, straining against opposing ties to mind and world. In this book Millikan casts conceptual content adrift from the thinker: what determines the content of a concept is …Read more
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323Content and Its vehicles in connectionist systemsMind and Language 22 (3). 2007.This paper advocates explicitness about the type of entity to be considered as content- bearing in connectionist systems; it makes a positive proposal about how vehicles of content should be individuated; and it deploys that proposal to argue in favour of representation in connectionist systems. The proposal is that the vehicles of content in some connectionist systems are clusters in the state space of a hidden layer. Attributing content to such vehicles is required to vindicate the standard ex…Read more
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98Short review of Varieties of Meaning: The 2002 Jean Nicod Lectures, R.G. Millikan (review)Quarterly Review of Biology 80 (3): 344. 2005.Review of Millikan, Varieties of Meaning. MIT Press, 2004.
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195Dual-Process Theories and Consciousness: The Case for "Type Zero" CognitionNeuroscience of Consciousness 2016 1-10. 2016.A step towards a theory of consciousness would be to characterise the effect of consciousness on information processing. One set of results suggests that the effect of consciousness is to interfere with computations that are optimally performed non-consciously. Another set of results suggests that conscious, system 2 processing is the home of norm-compliant computation. This is contrasted with system 1 processing, thought to be typically unconscious, which operates with useful but error-prone he…Read more
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631Naturalising Representational ContentPhilosophy Compass 8 (5): 496-509. 2013.This paper sets out a view about the explanatory role of representational content and advocates one approach to naturalising content – to giving a naturalistic account of what makes an entity a representation and in virtue of what it has the content it does. It argues for pluralism about the metaphysics of content and suggests that a good strategy is to ask the content question with respect to a variety of predictively successful information processing models in experimental psychology and cogni…Read more
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342The Biological Basis of Cultural Transmission (review)British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 57 (1): 259-266. 2006.Review of: Kim Sterelny: Thought in a Hostile World. Oxford: Blackwell, 2003.
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492Exploitable Isomorphism and Structural RepresentationProceedings of the Aristotelian Society 114 (2pt2): 123-144. 2014.An interesting feature of some sets of representations is that their structure mirrors the structure of the items they represent. Founding an account of representational content on isomorphism, homomorphism or structural resemblance has proven elusive, however, largely because these relations are too liberal when the candidate structure over representational vehicles is unconstrained. Furthermore, in many cases where there is a clear isomorphism, it is not relied on in the way the representation…Read more
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349Using phenomenal concepts to explain away the intuition of contingencyPhilosophical Psychology 27 (4): 553-570. 2014.Humans can think about their conscious experiences using a special class of ?phenomenal? concepts. Psychophysical identity statements formulated using phenomenal concepts appear to be contingent. Kripke argued that this intuited contingency could not be explained away, in contrast to ordinary theoretical identities where it can. If the contingency is real, property dualism follows. Physicalists have attempted to answer this challenge by pointing to special features of phenomenal concepts that ex…Read more
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384Consumers Need Information: supplementing teleosemantics with an input conditionPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 75 (2): 404-435. 2007.The success of a piece of behaviour is often explained by its being caused by a true representation (similarly, failure falsity). In some simple organisms, success is just survival and reproduction. Scientists explain why a piece of behaviour helped the organism to survive and reproduce by adverting to the behaviour’s having been caused by a true representation. That usage should, if possible, be vindicated by an adequate naturalistic theory of content. Teleosemantics cannot do so, when it is ap…Read more
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221Representational development need not be explicable-by-contentIn Vincent C. Müller (ed.), Fundamental Issues of Artificial Intelligence, Springer. pp. 221-238. 2016.Fodor’s radical concept nativism flowed from his view that hypothesis testing is the only route to concept acquisition. Many have successfully objected to the overly-narrow restriction to learning by hypothesis testing. Existing representations can be connected to a new representational vehicle so as to constitute a sustaining mechanism for a new representation, without the new representation thereby being constituted by or structured out of the old. This paper argues that there is also a deeper…Read more
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205Millikan’s Isomorphism RequirementIn Dan Ryder, Justine Kingsbury & Kenneth Williford (eds.), Millikan and her critics, Wiley. 2012.Millikan’s theory of content purports to rely heavily on the existence of isomorphisms between a system of representations and the things in the world which they represent — “the mapping requirement for being intentional signs” (Millikan 2004, p. 106). This paper asks whether those isomorphisms are doing any substantive explanatory work. Millikan’s isomorphism requirement is deployed for two main purposes. First, she claims that the existence of an isomorphism is the basic representing relati…Read more
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227Genetic Representation Explains the Cluster of Innateness‐Related PropertiesMind and Language 27 (4): 466-493. 2012.The concept of innateness is used to make inferences between various better-understood properties, like developmental canalization, evolutionary adaptation, heritability, species-typicality, and so on (‘innateness-related properties’). This article uses a recently-developed account of the representational content carried by inheritance systems like the genome to explain why innateness-related properties cluster together, especially in non-human organisms. Although inferences between innateness-r…Read more
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108Conceptual representations in goal-directed decision makingCognitive, Affective and Behavioral Neuroscience 8 (4): 418-428. 2008.Emerging evidence suggests that the long-established distinction between habit-based and goal-directed decision-making mechanisms can also be sustained in humans. Although the habit-based system has been extensively studied in humans, the goal-directed system is less well characterized. This review brings to that task the distinction between conceptual and nonconceptual representational mechanisms. Conceptual representations are structured out of semantic consituents - the use of which requires …Read more
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460Reward Prediction Error Signals are Meta‐RepresentationalNoûs 48 (2): 314-341. 2014.1. Introduction 2. Reward-Guided Decision Making 3. Content in the Model 4. How to Deflate a Metarepresentational Reading Proust and Carruthers on metacognitive feelings 5. A Deflationary Treatment of RPEs? 5.1 Dispensing with prediction errors 5.2 What is use of the RPE focused on? 5.3 Alternative explanations—worldly correlates 5.4 Contrast cases 6. Conclusion Appendix: Temporal Difference Learning Algorithms
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| Philosophy of Mind |
| Philosophy of Biology |
| Philosophy of Cognitive Science |
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Philosophy of Biology |
| Philosophy of Cognitive Science |