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73Out of the mouths of autistics: Subjective report and its role in cognitive theorizingIn Andrew Brook & Kathleen Akins (eds.), Cognition and the Brain: The Philosophy and Neuroscience Movement, Cambridge University Press. pp. 98. 2005.
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98Developing Trust on the InternetAnalyse & Kritik 26 (1): 91-107. 2004.Does the Internet provide an environment in which rational individuals can initiate and maintain relationships of interpersonal trust? This paper argues that it does. It begins by examining distinctive challenges facing would-be trusters on the net, concluding that, however distinctive, such challenges are not unique to the Internet, so cannot be cited as grounds for disparaging the rationality of Internet trust. Nevertheless, these challenges point up the importance of developing mature capacit…Read more
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234Psycho-practice, psycho-theory and the contrastive case of autism: How practices of mind become second-natureJournal of Consciousness Studies 8 (5-7): 109-132. 2001.In philosophy, the last thirty years or so has seen a split between 'simulation theorists' and 'theory-theorists', with a number of variations on each side. In general, simulation theorists favour the idea that our knowledge of others is based on using ourselves as a working model of what complex psychological creatures are like. Theory-theorists claim that our knowledge of complex psychological creatures, including ourselves, is theoretical in character and so more like our knowledge of the wor…Read more
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285Is "Self-Knowledge" an Empirical Problem? Renegotiating the Space of Philosophical ExplanationJournal of Philosophy 93 (10): 483-515. 1996.
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387Mind-making practices: the social infrastructure of self-knowing agency and responsibilityPhilosophical Explorations 18 (2): 259-281. 2015.This paper is divided into two parts. In Section 1, I explore and defend a “regulative view” of folk-psychology as against the “standard view”. On the regulative view, folk-psychology is conceptualized in fundamentally interpersonal terms as a “mind-making” practice through which we come to form and regulate our minds in accordance with a rich array of socially shared and socially maintained sense-making norms. It is not, as the standard view maintains, simply an epistemic capacity for coming to…Read more
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123Constructing agents: Rethinking the how and what in developmental theories of social understandingBehavioral and Brain Sciences 27 (1): 115-115. 2004.Although I am broadly in sympathy with Carpendale & Lewis's (C&L's) version of social constructivism, I raise two issues they might address. One bears on the question of how social understanding develops: Is their resistance to individualism inappropriately combined with a resistance to internalism? A second question concerns a more radical implication of their view for what social understanding is.
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20Civilizing blameIn D. Justin Coates & Neal A. Tognazzini (eds.), Blame: Its Nature and Norms, Oxford University Press. pp. 162--188. 2013.
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51Die Kunst des guten HoffensDeutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 60 (1): 105-133. 2012.What is hope? Though variously characterized as a cognitive attitude, an emotion, a disposition, and even a process or activity, I argue that it is, more deeply, a unifying and grounding force of human agency. Since we cannot live a human life without hope, questions about the rationality of hope are properly recast as questions about what it means to hope well. This thesis is defended and elaborated in four parts. In the first two sections, I argue that hope is an essential and distinctive feat…Read more
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103Are ‘Optimistic’ Theories of Criminal Justice Psychologically Feasible? The Probative Case of Civic RepublicanismCriminal Law and Philosophy 11 (3): 523-544. 2017.‘Optimistic’ normative theories of criminal justice aim to justify criminal sanction in terms of its reprobative/rehabilitative value rather than its punitive nature as such. But do such theories accord with ordinary intuitions about what constitutes a ‘just’ response to wrongdoing? Recent empirical work on the psychology of punishers suggests that human beings have a ‘brutely retributive’ moral psychology, making them unlikely to endorse normative theories that sacrifice retribution for the sak…Read more
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89Philip Gerrans and Victoria McGeer
Areas of Specialization
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