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157Introspection and the phenomenology of free will: Problems and prospectsJournal of Consciousness Studies 18 (1): 180-205. 2011.Inspired and informed by the work of Russ Hurlburt and Eric Schwitzgebel in their 'Describing Inner Experience', we do two things in this commentary. First, we discuss the degree of reliability that introspective methods might be expected to deliver across a range of types of experience. Second, we explore the phenomenology of agency as it bears on the topic of free will. We pose a number of poten-tial problems for attempts to use introspective methods to answer var-ious questions about the phen…Read more
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99The phenomenology of agency and the Libet resultsIn Walter Sinnott-Armstrong & Lynn Nadel (eds.), Conscious Will and Responsibility: A Tribute to Benjamin Libet, Oup Usa. pp. 159. 2010.
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Some ins and outs of transglobal reliabilismIn Sanford C. Goldberg (ed.), Internalism and externalism in semantics and epistemology, Oxford University Press. pp. 100. 2007.
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245Review: The Salem Witch Project (review)Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 65 (1). 2002.The authors’ central claim, they tell us, is that meaning discourse is radically normative, rather than descriptive. In the Introduction they say
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139From agentive phenomenology to cognitive phenomenology: A guide for the perplexedIn Tim Bayne and Michelle Montague (ed.), Cognitive Phenomenology, Oxford University Press. pp. 57. 2011.
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107Phenomenal Intentionality and Content DeterminacyIn Richard Schantz (ed.), Prospects for Meaning, De Gruyter. pp. 321-344. 2012.
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208Expressivism and contrary-forming negationPhilosophical Issues 19 (1): 92-112. 2009.No Abstract
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474Morphological Rationalism and the Psychology of Moral JudgmentEthical Theory and Moral Practice 10 (3): 279-295. 2007.According to rationalism regarding the psychology of moral judgment, people’s moral judgments are generally the result of a process of reasoning that relies on moral principles or rules. By contrast, intuitionist models of moral judgment hold that people generally come to have moral judgments about particular cases on the basis of gut-level, emotion-driven intuition, and do so without reliance on reasoning and hence without reliance on moral principles. In recent years the intuitionist model has…Read more
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171Troubles for Michael Smith's metaethical rationalismPhilosophical Papers 25 (3): 203-231. 1996.
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169Causal Compatibilism and the Exclusion ProblemTheoria: Revista de Teoría, Historia y Fundamentos de la Ciencia 16 (1): 95-115. 2001.Causal compatibilism claims that even though physics is causally closed, and even though mental properties are multiply realizable and are not identical to physical causal properties, mental properties are causal properties nonetheless. This position asserts that there is genuine causation at multiple descriptive/ontological levels; physics-level causal claims are not really incompatible with mentalistic causal claims. I articulate and defend a version of causal compatibilism that incorporates t…Read more
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67Materialism, minimal emergentism, and the hard problem of consciousnessIn Robert C. Koons & George Bealer (eds.), The waning of materialism, Oxford University Press. 2010.This chapter formulates and motivates the current favored articulation of the metaphysical doctrine of materialism. It describes an alternative metaphysical position called minimal emergentism, which has two versions; and then contrasts it with stronger kinds of emergentism. Minimal emergentism posits certain inter-level necessitation relations — either nomically necessary connections, or metaphysically necessary connections — that are metaphysically brute. The chapter sets forth what it takes t…Read more
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148You are given a choice between two envelopes. You are told, reliably, that each envelope has some money in it—some whole number of dollars, say—and that one envelope contains twice as much money as the other. You don’t know which has the higher amount and which has the lower. You choose one, but are given the opportunity to switch to the other. Here is an argument that it is rationally preferable to switch: Let x be the quantity of money in your chosen envelope. Then the quantity in the other is…Read more
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49What does it take to be a true believer?In Christina E. Erneling (ed.), The Mind As a Scientific Object: Between Brain and Culture, Oxford University Press. pp. 211. 2004.Eliminative materialism, as William Lycan (this volume) tells us, is materialism plus the claim that no creature has ever had a belief, desire, intention, hope, wish, or other “folk-psychological” state. Some contemporary philosophers claim that eliminative materialism is very likely true. They sketch certain potential scenarios, for the way theory might develop in cognitive science and neuroscience, that they claim are fairly likely; and they maintain that if such.
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Areas of Specialization
| Epistemology |
| Metaphysics |
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Meta-Ethics |