•  122
    Synthese special issue: representing philosophy
    with Tony Beavers
    Synthese 182 (2): 181-183. 2011.
    This special issue of Synthese discusses conceptual, ontological, technological, ethical, political, and professional dimensions of attempts to represent the entire discipline of philosophy. One of our goals with this issue was to collect in one place several of the leading projects in digital philosophy so that the profession can begin to discern and debate what might be the best practices for the representation of philosophy in the 21st century.
  •  553
    Primatologists generally agree that monkeys lack higher-order intentional capacities related to theory of mind. Yet the discovery of the so-called “mirror neurons” in monkeys suggests to many neuroscientists that they have the rudiments of intentional understanding. Given a standard philosophical view about intentional understanding, which requires higher-order intentionality, a paradox arises. Different ways of resolving the paradox are assessed, using evidence from neural, cognitive, and behav…Read more
  •  125
    Consciousness and ethics: Artificially conscious moral agents
    with Wendell Wallach and Stan Franklin
    International Journal of Machine Consciousness 3 (01): 177-192. 2011.
  •  717
    Deciphering animal pain
    In Murat Aydede (ed.), Pain: New Essays on Its Nature and the Methodology of Its Study, Bradford Book/mit Press. 2005.
    In this paper we1 assess the potential for research on nonhuman animals to address questions about the phenomenology of painful experiences. Nociception, the basic capacity for sensing noxious stimuli, is widespread in the animal kingdom. Even rel- atively primitive animals such as leeches and sea slugs possess nociceptors, neurons that are functionally specialized for sensing noxious stimuli (Walters 1996). Vertebrate spinal cords play a sophisticated role in processing and modulating nocicepti…Read more
  •  112
    The Cognitive Animal: Empirical and Theoretical Perspectives on Animal Cognition (edited book)
    with Marc Bekoff and Gordon M. Burghardt
    MIT Press. 2002.
    The fifty-seven original essays in this book provide a comprehensive overview of the interdisciplinary field of animal cognition.
  •  110
    dynamic ontologies must be inferred and populated in part from the reference corpora themselves, but ontological rela-.
  •  176
    The Geometry of Partial Understanding
    American Philosophical Quarterly 50 (3): 249-262. 2013.
    Wittgenstein famously ended his Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus (Wittgenstein 1922) by writing: "Whereof one cannot speak, one must pass over in silence." (Wovon man nicht sprechen kann, darüber muss man schweigen.) In that earliest work, Wittgenstein gives no clue about whether this aphorism applied to animal minds, or whether he would have included philosophical discussions about animal minds as among those displaying "the most fundamental confusions (of which the whole of philosophy is full)" …Read more
  •  89
    Animal concepts
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 (1): 66-66. 1998.
    Millikan's account of concepts is applicable to questions about concepts in nonhuman animals. I raise three questions in this context: (1) Does classical conditioning entail the possession of simple concepts? (2) Are movement property concepts more basic than substance concepts? (3) What is the empirical content of claiming that concept meanings do not necessarily change as dispositions change?
  •  885
    14. Real Traits, Real Functions?
    In Andre Ariew, Robert Cummins & Mark Perlman (eds.), Functions: New Essays in the Philosophy of Psychology and Biology, Oxford University Press. pp. 373. 2002.
    Discussions of the functions of biological traits generally take the notion of a trait for granted. Defining this notion is a non-trivial problem. Different approaches to function place different constraints on adequate accounts of the notion of a trait. Accounts of function based on engineering-style analyses allow trait boundaries to be a matter of human interest. Accounts of function based on natural selection have typically been taken to require trait boundaries that are objectively real. Af…Read more
  •  43
    Monkeys mind
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 15 (1): 147-147. 1992.