•  196
    Pain priors, polyeidism, and predictive power: a preliminary investigation into individual differences in our ordinary thought about pain
    with Emma Borg, Nat Hansen, Rich Harrison, Tim Salomons, Deepak Ravindran, and Harriet Wilkinson
    Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 42 (3): 113-135. 2021.
    According to standard philosophical and clinical understandings, pain is an essentially mental phenomenon (typically, a kind of conscious experience). In a challenge to this standard conception, a recent burst of empirical work in experimental philosophy, such as that by Justin Sytsma and Kevin Reuter, purports to show that people ordinarily conceive of pain as an essentially bodily phenomenon—specifically, a quality of bodily disturbance. In response to this bodily view, other recent experiment…Read more
  •  147
    Meaning and framing: the semantic implications of psychological framing effects
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 65 (8): 967-990. 2022.
    I use the psychological phenomenon of ‘attribute framing’ as a case study for exploring philosophical conceptions of semantics and the semantics-pragmatics divide. Attribute frames are pairs of sentences that use contradictory expressions to predicate the same property of an individual or object. Despite their equivalence, pairs of attribute frames have been observed to induce systematic variability in hearers’ responses. One explanation of such framing effects appeals to the distinct ‘reference…Read more
  •  123
    Introduction
    Ratio 33 (4): 203-205. 2020.
    Ratio, EarlyView.
  •  183
    The debate between Semantic Minimalism and Radical Contextualism is standardly characterized as concerning truth-evaluability—specifically, whether or not sentences require rich contextualization in order to express complete, truth-evaluable contents. In this paper, I examine the notion of truth-evaluability, considering which kinds of mappings it might require from worldly states of affairs to truth-values. At one end of the spectrum, an exhaustive notion would require truth-evaluable contents …Read more
  •  103
    Is language necessary for thinking about thoughts
    Dissertation, University of Edinburgh. 2013.
    This paper considers one aspect of the relationship between language and thought, focusing on a theory proposed by José Luis Bermúdez. Bermúdez argues that language is required for any kinds of thinking that involve thinking about thoughts, or what he calls 'intentional ascent'. I argue, to the contrary, that Bermúdez gives us no reason to suppose language is necessary for all instances of thinking about thoughts. Whilst I am broadly sympathetic to supra-communicative approaches to language, I s…Read more