•  150
    Knowing with images: Medium and message
    Philosophy of Science 77 (2): 295-313. 2010.
    Problems concerning scientists’ uses of representations have received quite a bit of attention recently. The focus has been on how such representations get their contents and on just what those contents are. Less attention has been paid to what makes certain kinds of scientific representations different from one another and thus well suited to this or that epistemic end. This article considers the latter question with particular focus on the distinction between images and graphs on the one hand …Read more
  •  60
    Hue magnitudes and revelation
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 26 (1): 36-37. 2003.
    Revelation, the thesis that the full intrinsic nature of colors is revealed to us by color experiences, is false in Byrne & Hilbert's (B&H's) view, but in an interesting and nonobvious way. I show what would make Revelation true, given B&H's account of colors, and then show why that situation fails to obtain, and why that is interesting.
  •  16
    Pictorial Diversity
    In Catharine Abell Katerina Bantinaki (ed.), Philosophical Perspectives on Depiction, Oxford University Press. pp. 25. 2010.
  •  21
    Introspective Availability
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 80 (1): 208-228. 2010.
  •  34
    Sight and Sensibility (review)
    Dialogue 46 (2): 412-414. 2007.
  •  98
    Maps, Pictures, and Predication
    Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 2. 2015.
  •  41
    Heavenly Sight and the Nature of Seeing-In
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 67 (4): 387-397. 2009.
  •  192
    Pictorial representation
    Philosophy Compass 1 (6). 2006.
    Maps, notes, descriptions, diagrams, flowcharts, photographs, paintings, and prints, all, in one way or another, manage to be about things or stand for them. This article looks at three ways in which philosophers have explained the way that pictures represent the world. It starts by describing some leading perceptual accounts and then surveys contemporary content and structural alternatives.
  •  113
    Isomorphism in information-carrying systems
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 85 (4): 380-395. 2004.
    For the information theorist, the lawful generalizations that subsume instantiations of properties in the environment and instantiations of properties of perceptual representations determine the latter's content. Perceptual representations are also commonly thought to be isomorphic to what they represent, which presents the information theorist with a puzzle. What role could isomorphism play in perceptual representation when lawful generalizations determine content? I show that in order for the …Read more