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1842The Character of Cognitive PhenomenologyIn Thiemo Breyer & Christopher Gutland (eds.), Phenomenology of Thinking: Philosophical Investigations Into the Character of Cognitive Experiences, Routledge. pp. 25-43. 2015.Recent discussions of phenomenal consciousness have taken increased interest in the existence and scope of non-sensory types of phenomenology, notably so-called cognitive phenomenology. These discussions have been largely restricted, however, to the question of the existence of such a phenomenology. Little attention has been given to the character of cognitive phenomenology: what in fact is it like to engage in conscious cognitive activity? This paper offers an approach to this question. Focus…Read more
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3359The Phenomenology of Kantian Respect for PersonsIn Richard Dean & Oliver Sensen (eds.), Respect: philosophical essays, Oxford University Press. pp. 77-98. 2021.Emotions can be understood generally from two different perspectives: (i) a third-person perspective that specifies their distinctive functional role within our overall cognitive economy and (ii) a first-person perspective that attempts to capture their distinctive phenomenal character, the subjective quality of experiencing them. One emotion that is of central importance in many ethical systems is respect (in the sense of respect for persons or so-called recognition-respect). However, discussio…Read more
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3Interpretation: Its Scope and LimitsIn Allan Hazlett (ed.), New Waves in Metaphysics, Palgrave-macmillan. 2010.According to interpretivism, all there is to having an intentional property is being best interpreted as having it. I present a regress-or-circularity argument against this. In §1, I elucidate interpretivism, and in §2, I present the argument against it.
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453Self-Representational Approaches to Consciousness (edited book)MIT Press. 2006.Leading theorists examine the self-representational theory of consciousness as an alternative to the two dominant reductive theories of consciousness, the ..
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1233Entertaining as a Propositional Attitude: A Non-Reductive CharacterizationAmerican Philosophical Quarterly 50 (1): 1-22. 2013.Contemporary philosophy of mind tends to theorize about the propositional attitudes primarily in terms of belief and desire. But there is a propositional attitude, sometimes called ‘entertaining,’ that seems to resist analysis in terms of belief and desire, and has been thought at other times and places (notably, in late nineteenth-century Austrian philosophy) to be more fundamental than belief and desire. Whether or not we accept the fundamentality of entertaining, it certainly seems to be an a…Read more
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77Gray matters: Functionalism, intentionalism, and the search for NCC in Jeffrey gray's workJournal of Consciousness Studies 14 (4): 96-116. 2007.Since Francis Crick popularized the term `Neural Correlate of Consciousness' (NCC), it has been the focus of what is perhaps the most exciting research area in the cognitive sciences. Different researchers and laboratories have offered different brain structures as candidates for the NCC prize. Different chunks of gray matter have been identified as the potential seat of consciousness. Some researchers attempt to identify the NCC via a characterization of the cognitive aspects of consciousness, …Read more
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210The Routledge Handbook of Franz Brentano and the Brentano School (edited book)Routledge. 2017.Both through his own work and that of his students, Franz Clemens Brentano had an often underappreciated influence on the course of 20 th - and 21 st -century philosophy. _The Routledge Handbook of Franz Brentano and the Brentano School_ offers full coverage of Brentano’s philosophy and his influence. It contains 38 brand-new essays from an international team of experts that offer a comprehensive view of Brentano’s central research areas—philosophy of mind, metaphysics, and value theory—as well …Read more
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4307Brentano's Mature Theory of IntentionalityJournal for the History of Analytical Philosophy 4 (2): 1-15. 2016.The notion of intentionality is what Franz Brentano is best known for. But disagreements and misunderstandings still surround his account of its nature. In this paper, I argue that Brentano’s mature account of the nature of intentionality construes it, not as a two-place relation between a subject and an object, nor as a three-place relation between a subject’s act, its object, and a ‘content,’ but as an altogether non-relational, intrinsic property of subjects. I will argue that the view is mor…Read more
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116Review of M. Rowland, Externalism (review)Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 72 (2): 487-490. 2006.Externalism: Putting Mind and World Back Together Again, MARK ROWLANDS. Montreal and Kingston, and Ithaca.
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94Recent work on phenomenal consciousness has featured a number of debates on the existence and character of controversial types of phenomenology. Perhaps the best-‐ known is a debate over the existence of a proprietary, irreducible cognitive phenomenology – a phenomenology proper to thought. Others concern the existence of irreducible agential or conative phenomenology, irreducible emotional phenomenology, and so on. In this paper, I argue that the act of entertaining a proposition also exhibits…Read more
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269Trope theory and the metaphysics of appearancesAmerican Philosophical Quarterly 41 (1): 5-20. 2004.The concept of appearance has had the historical misfortune of being associated with a Kantian or idealist program in metaphysics. Within this program, appearances are treated as "internal objects" that are immaterial and exert no causal powers over the physical world. However, there is a more mundane and innocuous notion of appearance, in which to say that x appears to y is just to say that y perceives x. In this more mundane sense of the term, an appearance is a perceived object ? qua perceive…Read more
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250Composition as a secondary qualityPacific Philosophical Quarterly 89 (3): 359-383. 2008.Abstract: The 'special composition question' is this: given objects O1, . . . , On, under what conditions is there an object O, such that O1, . . . , On compose O? This paper explores a heterodox answer to this question, one that casts composition as a secondary quality. According to the approach I want to consider, there is an O that O1, . . . , On compose (roughly) just in case a normal intuiter would, under normal conditions, intuit that there is.
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55This is a paper I wrote at the end of my first year in grad school. I'm not sure why it's online and don't remember what I say in it. Just thought I'd mention...
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140An argument against dispositionalist HOTPhilosophical Psychology 19 (4): 463-476. 2006.In this paper we present a two-stage argument against Peter Carruthers' theory of phenomenal consciousness. The first stage shows that Carruthers' main argument against first-order representational theories of phenomenal consciousness applies with equal force against his own theory. The second stage shows that if Carruthers can escape his own argument against first-order theories, it will come at the cost of wedding his theory to certain unwelcome implausibilities. discusses Carruthers' argument…Read more
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476Moral Motivation, Moral Phenomenology, And The Alief/Belief DistinctionAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 90 (3): 469-486. 2012.In a series of publications, Tamar Gendler has argued for a distinction between belief and what she calls ?alief?. Gendler's argument for the distinction is a serviceability argument: the distinction is indispensable for explaining a whole slew of phenomena, typically involving ?belief-behaviour mismatch?. After embedding Gendler's distinction in a dual-process model of moral cognition, I argue here that the distinction also suggests a possible (dis)solution of what is perhaps the organizing pro…Read more
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170Tropes and factsMetaphysica 6 (2): 83-90. 2005.The notion that there is a single type of entity in terms of which the whole world can be described has fallen out of favor in recent Ontology. There are only two serious exceptions to this. Factualists (Skyrms 1981, Armstrong 1997) hold that the world can be fully described in terms of facts. Trope theorists (Williams 1953, Campbell 1981, 1990) hold that it can be fully described in terms of tropes. Yet the relationship between facts and tropes remains obscure in both camps’ writings. In this n…Read more
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2505Philosophy as Total Axiomatics: Serious Metaphysics, Scrutability Bases, and Aesthetic EvaluationJournal of the American Philosophical Association 2 (2): 272-290. 2016.What is the aim of philosophy? There may be too many philosophical branches, traditions, practices, and programs to admit of a single overarching aim. Here I focus on a fairly traditional philosophical project that has recently received increasingly sophisticated articulation, especially by Frank Jackson (1998) and David Chalmers (2012). In §1, I present the project and suggest that it is usefully thought of as ‘total axiomatics’: the project of attempting to axiomatize the total theory of the w…Read more
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255In defense of self-representationalism: reply to criticsPhilosophical Studies 159 (3): 475-484. 2012.In defense of self-representationalism: reply to critics Content Type Journal Article Pages 1-10 DOI 10.1007/s11098-011-9764-8 Authors Uriah Kriegel, Department of Philosophy, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA Journal Philosophical Studies Online ISSN 1573-0883 Print ISSN 0031-8116
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136Review of E. Schwitzgebel, Perplexities of Consciousness (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews. 2011.
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3313Beyond the Neural Correlates of ConsciousnessIn The Oxford Handbook of the Philosophy of Consciousness, Oxford University Press. pp. 261-276. 2020.The centerpiece of the scientific study of consciousness is the search for the neural correlates of consciousness. Yet science is typically interested not only in discovering correlations, but also – and more deeply – in explaining them. When faced with a correlation between two phenomena in nature, we typically want to know why they correlate. The purpose of this chapter is twofold. The first half attempts to lay out the various possible explanations of the correlation between consciousness and…Read more
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303Précis of Subjective consciousness: a self-representational theory (review)Philosophical Studies 159 (3): 443-445. 2012.This is a Precis of my book _Subjective Consciousness: A Self-Representational Theory_. It does the usual.
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4047Brentano's Classification of Mental PhenomenaIn The Routledge Handbook of Franz Brentano and the Brentano School, Routledge. pp. 97-102. 2017.In Chapter 3 of Book I of Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint, Brentano articulates what he takes to be the four most basic and central tasks of psychology. One of them is to discover the ‘fundamental classification’ of mental phenomena. Brentano attends to this task in Chapters 5-9 of Book II of the Psychology, reprinted (with appendices) in 1911 as a standalone book (Brentano 1911a). The classification is further developed in an essay entitled “A Survey of So-Called Sensory and Noetic Obje…Read more
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181Review of The Primacy of the Subjective: Foundations for a Unified Theory of Mind and Language (review)Mind 116 (463): 749-753. 2007.
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Conscious ContentDissertation, Brown University. 2003.The purpose of this dissertation is to argue that mental states are conscious when, and only when, they are intentionally directed at themselves. Thus, if for subject x to perceive a tree is for x to harbor an internal state which is intentionally directed at a tree, then for x to have a conscious perception of a tree is for x to harbor an internal state which is primarily directed at the tree and secondarily directed at itself. If so, consciousness is reductively explicable in terms of intentio…Read more
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133The Same-Order Monitoring Theory of Consciousness. Second VersionSynthesis Philosophica 22 (2): 361-384. 2007.Monitoring approaches to consciousness claim that a mental state is conscious when it is suitably monitored. Higher-order monitoring theory makes the monitoring state and the monitored state logically independent. Same-order monitoring theory claims a constitutive, non-contingent connection between the monitoring state and the monitored state. In this paper, I articulate different versions of the same-order monitoring theory and argue for its supremacy over the higher-order monitoring theory.
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1271A hesitant defense of introspectionPhilosophical Studies 165 (3): 1165-1176. 2013.Consider the following argument: when a phenomenon P is observable, any legitimate understanding of P must take account of observations of P; some mental phenomena—certain conscious experiences—are introspectively observable; so, any legitimate understanding of the mind must take account of introspective observations of conscious experiences. This paper offers a (preliminary and partial) defense of this line of thought. Much of the paper focuses on a specific challenge to it, which I call Schwit…Read more
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351Naturalizing Subjective CharacterPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 71 (1): 23-57. 2005.. When I have a conscious experience of the sky, there is a bluish way it is like for me to have that experience. We may distinguish two aspects of this "bluish way it is like for me": the bluish aspect and the for-me aspect. Let us call the bluish aspect of the experience its qualitative character and the for-me aspect its subjective character . What is this elusive for-me-ness, or subjective character , of conscious experience? In this paper, I examine six different attempts to account for sub…Read more
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557The dispensability of (merely) intentional objectsPhilosophical Studies 141 (1): 79-95. 2008.The ontology of (merely) intentional objects is a can of worms. If we can avoid ontological commitment to such entities, we should. In this paper, I offer a strategy for accomplishing that. This is to reject the traditional act-object account of intentionality in favor of an adverbial account. According to adverbialism about intentionality, having a dragon thought is not a matter of bearing the thinking-about relation to dragons, but of engaging in the activity of thinking dragon-wise.
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3967The Three Circles of ConsciousnessIn M. Guillot & M. Garcia-Carpintero (eds.), Self-Experience: Essays on Inner Awareness, Oxford University Press. pp. 169-191. 2023.A widespread assumption in current philosophy of mind is that a conscious state’s phenomenal properties vary with its representational contents. In this paper, I present (rather dogmatically) an alternative picture that recognizes two kinds of phenomenal properties that do not vary concomitantly with content. First, it admits phenomenal properties that vary rather with attitude: what it is like for me to see rain is phenomenally different from what it is like for me to remember (indistinguishabl…Read more