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108An eye for an eye: Reciprocity and the calibration of redressBehavioral and Brain Sciences 36 (1): 20-20. 2013.General systems for reciprocity explain the same phenomena as the target article's proposed revenge system, and can explain other cooperative phenomena. We need more reason to hypothesise a specific revenge system. In addition, the proposed calculus of revenge is less sensitive to absolute magnitudes of revenge than it should be.
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114Review of Burns, J. The Descent of Madness: Evolutionary Origins of Psychosis and the Social Brain (review)South African Journal of Philosophy 28 (2): 257-258. 2009.Review of Burns, J. The Descent of Madness: Evolutionary Origins of Psychosis and the Social Brain (London: Routledge, 2007)
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88Need there be a common currency for decision-making?South African Journal of Philosophy 28 (2): 210-221. 2009.According to various theorists and empirical scholars of behavior and decision, including economists, utility theorists, behavioral ecologists, behavioral economists and researchers in the new field of neuroeconomics the value (typically understood as utility) of competing choices must be represented on a common scale in order for them to count as competing at all, and in order for orderly comparison to lead to actual choices. For some neuroeconomists this means that expected (cardinal) utilitie…Read more
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87Cui bono? Selfish goals need to pay their wayBehavioral and Brain Sciences 37 (2): 155-156. 2014.
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135What Is Addiction? (edited book)The MIT Press. 2010.Leading addiction researchers survey the latest findings in addiction science, countering the simplistic cultural stereotypes of the addict.
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105Evolutionary psychology and functionally empty metaphorsBehavioral and Brain Sciences 29 (2): 192-193. 2006.Lea & Webley's (L&W's) non-exclusive distinction between tool-like and drug-like motivators is insufficiently discriminating to say much about money that is useful, as the distinction's equivocal application to sex, food, and drugs shows. Further, it appears as though the motivations of problem gamblers are non-metaphorically like those of drug addicts. (Published Online April 5 2006).
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48Transcendental realism defended: a response to AllanSouth African Journal of Philosophy 17 (3): 198-210. 1998.
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122Reductionisms and physicalismsSouth African Journal of Philosophy 25 (2): 159-170. 2006.Causal exclusion arguments, especially as championed by Kim, have recently made life uncomfortable for would-be non-reductive physicalists. Non-reductive physicalism was itself, in turn, partly a response to earlier arguments against reductionism. The philosophy of science, though, distinguishes more forms of reduction than philosophy of mind generally cares to. In this paper I review four major families of reductionist thesis, and give reasons for keeping them more carefully separate than usual…Read more
University Of Natal, Durban
Alumnus, 2000
Durban, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
Areas of Specialization
| Metaphysics |
| Philosophy of Cognitive Science |
| Philosophy of Biology |
Areas of Interest
| Epistemology |
| Metaphysics |
| Philosophy of Cognitive Science |
PhilPapers Editorships
| Causal Closure of the Physical |