•  28
    Fichte on the Human Body as an Instrument of Perception
    History of Philosophy Quarterly 32 (1): 37-56. 2015.
    This paper considers what Fichte's conception of the human body as an instrument of perception entails for his radical principle of the primacy of practice. According to Fichte, perception is a function of what he calls the "articulation" of the human body, as opposed to its "organization." I first provide an interpretation of his theory of the human-bodily articulation by arguing that he construes it as a product of culture as well as nature. On this basis, I go on to consider the theory's impl…Read more
  •  38
    Reading Hume's Inference from Constancy from the Vulgar Standpoint
    Journal of Scottish Philosophy 10 (2): 237-253. 2012.
    Recent work on Hume's Theory of Perception has shown that Hume takes the appearance of impressions to vary according to the ideas under which they are subsumed. In this paper, I argue that the vulgar position in the section where he discusses the Inference from Constancy is characterised by an ideal primordial state of mind where impressions are directly encountered without being subsumed under any idea. In particular, impressions which are not subsumed under the idea of a perception do not appe…Read more