•  22
    A Defense of Cartesian Materialism
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 59 (4): 939-963. 1999.
    One of the principal tasks Dennett sets himself in Consciousness Explained is to demolish the Cartesian theater model of phenomenal consciousness, which in its contemporary garb takes the form of Cartesian materialism: the idea that conscious experience is a process of presentation realized in the physical materials of the brain. The now standard response to Dennett is that, in focusing on Cartesian materialism, he attacks an impossibly naive account of consciousness held by no one currently wor…Read more
  •  16
    Consciousness is a pretty sexy topic right now, as the plethora of recent books on the subject demonstrate. Everyone is having a go at it: philosophers, psychologists, neuroscientists and physicists, to mention just a few. And for every discipline or sub-discipline that pretends to some insight on the matter we find not only a different explanatory strategy, but a different take on the explanandum – there is widespread disagreement about what a theory of consciousness should actually explain. Ho…Read more
  •  8
    Reviews (review)
    with Christopher Lawrence, Ivan Crozier, Jon Agar, Harold Love, and Jim Endersby
    Metascience 9 (2): 267-319. 2000.
  •  2
    David Braddon-Mitchell and Frank Jackson, Philosophy of Mind and Cognition (review)
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 76 (4): 642. 1998.