•  23
    In the opening paragraph of “Computing Machinery and Intelligence” Alan Turing famously notes that “if the meaning of the words ‘machine’ and ‘think’ are to be found by examining how they are commonly used it is difficult to escape the conclusion that the meaning and the answer to the question, ‘Can machines think?’ is to be sought in a statistical survey such as a Gallup poll.” He then immediately responds, “But this is absurd.” But why is this absurd, if indeed it is? We think that the suggest…Read more
  •  23
    Robot pains and corporate feelings
    The Philosophers' Magazine 52 78-82. 2011.
    Most philosophers of mind follow Thomas Nagel and hold that subjective experiences are characterised by the fact that there is “something it is like” to have them. Philosophers of mind have sometimes speculated that ordinary people endorse, perhaps implicitly, this conception of subjective experiences. Some recent findings cast doubt on this view.
  •  19
    Common arguments for realism about phenomenal consciousness contend that this is a folk concept, with proponents expecting it to be lexicalised in ordinary language. In English, the word ‘experience’ is typically regarded as the best candidate. This predicts that ‘experience’ will be used to refer to mental states and episodes, not only in philosophical but also in ordinary discourse. We conduct a corpus study in order to assess this claim and to understand the actual use of the word in non-acad…Read more
  •  17
    This is a comprehensive collection of essays that explores cutting-edge work in experimental philosophy, a radical new movement that applies quantitative and empirical methods to traditional topics of philosophical inquiry. Situates the discipline within Western philosophy and then surveys the work of experimental philosophers by sub-discipline Contains insights for a diverse range of fields, including linguistics, cognitive science, anthropology, economics, and psychology, as well as almost eve…Read more
  •  12
    Mutual entailment between causation and responsibility
    with Pascale Willemsen and Kevin Https://Orcidorg Reuter
    Philosophical Studies 180 (12): 3593-3614. 2023.
    The standard view in philosophy is that responsibility entails causation. Most philosophers treat this entailment claim as an evident insight into the ordinary concepts of responsibility and causation. Further, it is taken to be equally obvious that the reversal of this claim does not hold: causation does not entail responsibility. In contrast, Sytsma and Livengood have put forward an account of the use of ordinary causal attributions (statements like “X caused Y”) that contends that they are ty…Read more
  •  12
    Attributions of Consciousness
    In Justin Sytsma & Wesley Buckwalter (eds.), A Companion to Experimental Philosophy, Wiley. 2016.
    This chapter focuses on attributions of phenomenal consciousness, leaving to the side interesting questions about how people attribute other types of consciousness. While researchers are not in perfect agreement about how the concept of phenomenal consciousness should be understood, the standard line is that a creature is phenomenally conscious just in case it has phenomenally conscious mental states, and that a mental state is phenomenally conscious just in case it has phenomenal qualities. The…Read more
  •  12
    Causation attributions and corpus analysis
    with Roland Bluhm, Pascale Willemsen, Kevin Reuter, Eugen Fischer, and Mark Douglas Curtis
    In Pascale Willemsen & Alex Wiegmann (eds.), Advances in Experimental Philosophy of Causation, Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 209-238. 2022.
  •  7
    Hallucinating pain
    with Kevin Reuter and Dustin Phillips
    In Reuter, Kevin; Phillips, Dustin; Sytsma, Justin (2014). Hallucinating pain. In: Sytsma, Justin. Advances in Experimental Philosophy of Mind. London: Bloomsbury Academic, n/a, . 2014.
  • Neuroscience & the nature of philosophy
    Iride: Filosofia e Discussione Pubblica 46 495-514. 2005.