•  1
    The Animals Issue
    Environmental Values 2 (4): 370-371. 1993.
  •  516
    Why the question of animal consciousness might not matter very much
    Philosophical Psychology 18 (1): 83-102. 2005.
    According to higher-order thought accounts of phenomenal consciousness it is unlikely that many non-human animals undergo phenomenally conscious experiences. Many people believe that this result would have deep and far-reaching consequences. More specifically, they believe that the absence of phenomenal consciousness from the rest of the animal kingdom must mark a radical and theoretically significant divide between ourselves and other animals, with important implications for comparative psychol…Read more
  •  131
    Perceiving mental states
    Consciousness and Cognition 36 498-507. 2015.
  •  295
    Action-Awareness and the Active Mind
    Philosophical Papers 38 (2): 133-156. 2009.
    In a pair of recent papers and his new book, Christopher Peacocke (2007, 2008a, 2008b) takes up and defends the claim that our awareness of our own actions is immediate and not perceptually based, and extends it into the domain of mental action.1 He aims to provide an account of action-awareness that will generalize to explain how we have immediate awareness of our own judgments, decisions, imaginings, and so forth. These claims form an important component in a much larger philosophical edifice,…Read more
  •  178
    Review: Thinking without words (review)
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 55 (4): 807-810. 2004.
  •  79
    Fragmentary sense
    Mind 93 (371): 351-369. 1984.
  •  394
    On being simple minded
    American Philosophical Quarterly 41 (3): 205-220. 2004.
    None.