•  198
    No doing without time
    with Shen Pan
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 42. 2019.
    Hoerl & McCormack claim that animals don't represent time. Because this makes a mystery of established findings in comparative psychology, there had better be some important payoff. The main one they mention is that it explains a clash of intuition about the reality of time's passage. But any theory that recognizes the representational requirements of agency can do likewise.
  •  34
  •  25
    Pretend play: More imitative than imaginative
    Mind and Language 38 (2): 464-479. 2023.
    Pretense is generally thought to constitutively involve imagination. We argue that this is a mistake. Although pretense often involves imagination, it need not; nor is it a kind of imagination. The core nature of pretense is closer to imitation than it is to imagination, and likely shares some of its motivation with the former. Three main strands of argument are presented. One is from the best explanation of cross‐cultural data. Another is from task‐analysis of instances of pretend play. And the…Read more
  •  34
    Stop Caring about Consciousness
    Philosophical Topics 48 (1): 1-20. 2020.
    The best empirically grounded theory of first-personal phenomenal consciousness is global workspace theory. This, combined with the success of the phenomenal-concept strategy, means that consciousness can be fully reductively explained in terms of globally broadcast representational content. So there are no qualia. As a result, the question of which other creatures besides ourselves are phenomenally conscious is of no importance, and doesn’t admit of a factual answer in most cases. What is real,…Read more
  •  123
    On Valence: Imperative or Representation of Value?
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 74 (3): 533-553. 2023.
    Affective valence is increasingly thought to be the common currency underlying all forms of intuitive, non-discursive decision making, in both humans and other animals. And it is thought to constitute the good or bad (pleasant or unpleasant) aspects of all desires, emotions, and moods. This article contrasts two theories of valence. According to one, valence is an experience-directed imperative (‘more of this!’ or ‘less of this!’); according to the other, valence is a representation of adaptive …Read more
  •  52
    We present Birch and colleagues with a dilemma. On one interpretation, they aim to chart the distribution of a sort of minimal perceptual awareness across the animal kingdom, where that awareness can be fully characterized in third-person psychological terms. On this interpretation, the project is worthy but dull, since it doesn’t touch the question that has excited most people: whether other animals are phenomenally conscious. On an alternative interpretation, in contrast, they hope to resolve …Read more
  •  3
    Mind and Mechanism, by Drew V. McDermott
    Artificial Intelligence 151 (1-2): 237-240. 2003.
  •  57
    An Interview with Peter Carruthers
    with Romy Aran, Nathan Beaucage, and Melissa Kwan
    The Harvard Review of Philosophy 27 13-21. 2020.
  •  53
    What Is Empiricism?
    Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 64 (1). 1990.
  •  91
    Explicit nonconceptual metacognition
    Philosophical Studies 178 (7): 2337-2356. 2020.
    The goal of this paper is to explore forms of metacognition that have rarely been discussed in the extensive psychological and philosophical literatures on the topic. These would comprise explicit instances of meta-representation of some set of mental states or processes in oneself, but without those representations being embedded in anything remotely resembling a theory of mind, and independent of deployment of any sort of concept-like representation of the mental. Following a critique of some …Read more
  •  76
    How Mindreading Might Mislead Cognitive Science
    Journal of Consciousness Studies 27 (7-8): 195-219. 2020.
    This article explores three ways in which a cognitively entrenched mindreading (or 'theory of mind') system may bias our thinking as cognitive scientists. One issues in a form of tacit dualism, impacting scientific debates about phenomenal consciousness. Another leads us to think that our own minds are easier to know than they really are, influencing debates about self-knowledge, and about mindreading itself. And the third results in a bias in favour of empiricist over nativist accounts of cogni…Read more
  •  33
    Explaining the Empiricist Bias: Reply to Berent
    Journal of Consciousness Studies 27 (7-8): 230-235. 2020.
    Berent (this issue) critiques one of the three main proposals put forward by Carruthers (this issue), who suggests that cognitive scientists are biased against innateness-claims by the tacit assumptions of the mentalizing faculty. Berent proposes, instead, that the bias results from dissonance produced by a conflict between our innate dualism and our innate essentialism. The present response raises a number of difficulties for her argument.
  •  83
    Representing the Mind as Such in Infancy
    Review of Philosophy and Psychology 11 (4): 765-781. 2020.
    Tyler Burge claims in a recent high-profile publication that none of the existing evidence for mental-state attribution by children prior to the age of four or five really supports such a conclusion; and he makes this claim, not just for beliefs, but for mental states of all sorts. In its place, he offers an explanatory framework according to which infants and young children attribute mere information-registering states and teleologically-characterized motivational states, which are said to lack…Read more
  •  177
    Hume Variations
    Mind 114 (453): 141-145. 2005.
  •  9
    Philosophical Relativity
    Philosophical Quarterly 35 (139): 207-210. 1985.
  •  61
    Claims about consciousness in animals are often made in support of their moral standing. Peter Carruthers argues that there is no fact of the matter about animal consciousness and it is of no scientific or ethical significance. Sympathy for an animal can be grounded in its mental states, but should not rely on assumptions about its consciousness.
  •  33
    Theory of mind
    Encyclopedia of Evolutionary Psychological Science. 2017.
    Theory of mind” consists in the ability to use concepts of intentional mental states, such as beliefs, emotions, intentions, goals, and perceptual states, in order to predict and interpret behavior. Functional magnetic resonance imaging studies have revealed a distinctive network of neural regions that is active during theory-of-mind tasks, including the temporal-parietal junction, the posterior superior temporal sulcus, the medial prefrontal cortex, the precuneus, and the temporal poles (Van Ov…Read more
  •  39
    In Defence of First-Order Representationalism
    Journal of Consciousness Studies 24 (5-6): 74-87. 2017.
    Carruthers (2000; 2005) provides a general defence of reductive representationalism about phenomenal consciousness while critiquing first-order theories of the sort proposed by Baars (1988), Tye (1995), Dennett (2001), and others (thereby motivating a form of higher-order account). The present paper defends first-order theories against that attack.
  •  66
    The Illusion of Conscious Thought
    Journal of Consciousness Studies 24 (9-10): 228-252. 2017.
    This paper argues that episodic thoughts are always unconscious. Whether consciousness is understood in terms of global broadcasting/widespread accessibility or in terms of non-interpretive higher-order awareness, the conclusion is the same: there is no such thing as conscious thought. Arguments for this conclusion are reviewed. The challenge of explaining why we should all be under the illusion that our thoughts are often conscious is then taken up.
  •  5
    Firestone & Scholl conflate two distinct issues
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 39. 2016.
  •  36
    Mechanisms for constrained stochasticity
    Synthese 197 (10): 4455-4473. 2020.
    Creativity is generally thought to be the production of things that are novel and valuable. Humans are unique in the extent of their creativity, which plays a central role in innovation and problem solving, as well as in the arts. But what are the cognitive sources of novelty? More particularly, what are the cognitive sources of stochasticity in creative production? I will argue that they belong to two broad categories. One is associative, enabling the selection of goal-relevant ideas that have …Read more
  •  50
    Review EssayHuman Knowledge and Human Nature: A New Introduction to an Ancient Debate.Knowledge and the State of Nature: An Essay in Conceptual Synthesis
    with Richard Feldman and Edward Craig
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 57 (1): 205. 1997.
  •  31
    Episodic memory isn't essentially autonoetic
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 41. 2018.
  •  14
    Continuity in Mind
    The Philosophers' Magazine 76 78-83. 2017.
  • The Metaphysics of the Tractatus
    Philosophy 66 (255): 125-128. 1991.
  •  117
    The Evolution of Self-Knowledge
    Philosophical Topics 40 (2): 13-37. 2012.
    Humans have the capacity for awareness of many aspects of their own mental lives—their own experiences, feelings, judgments, desires, and decisions. We can often know what it is that we see, hear, feel, judge, want, or decide. This article examines the evolutionary origins of this form of self-knowledge. Two alternatives are contrasted and compared with the available evidence. One is first-person based: self-knowledge is an adaptation designed initially for metacognitive monitoring and control. …Read more
  •  75
    Opening Up Vision: The Case Against Encapsulation
    Review of Philosophy and Psychology 7 (4): 721-742. 2016.
    Many have argued that early visual processing is encapsulated from the influence of higher-level goals, expectations, and knowledge of the world. Here we confront the main arguments offered in support of such a view, showing that they are unpersuasive. We also present evidence of top–down influences on early vision, emphasizing data from cognitive neuroscience. Our conclusion is that encapsulation is not a defining feature of visual processing. But we take this conclusion to be quite modest in s…Read more