•  225
    Sync-ing in the stream of experience: Time-consciousness in Broad, Husserl, and Dainton
    PSYCHE: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Research On Consciousness 9. 2003.
    By examining Dainton's account of the temporality of consciousness in the context of long-running debates about the specious present and time consciousness in both the Jamesian and the phenomenological traditions, I raise critical objections to his overlap model. Dainton's interpretations of Broad and Husserl are both insightful and problematic. In addition, there are unresolved problems in Dainton's own analysis of conscious experience. These problems involve ongoing content, lingering content,…Read more
  •  97
    Ipseity and Alterity: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Intersubjectivity (edited book)
    with Stephen Watson
    Publications de l'Université de Rouen.. 2004.
    Introduction In Autrement qu'etre on au-delh de I'essence, Levinas claims that ipseity depends upon alterity. One of the reasons given is that I, according to Levinas, become a subject exactly by being addressed and accused by the Other .
  •  8
    Book reviews (review)
    with Robert S. Stufflebeam, Adina Roskies, Fred A. Keijzer, Carol Slater, Henry Cribbs, and John T. Bruer
    Philosophical Psychology 9 (4): 545-570. 1996.
  •  116
    In recent philosophy of mind, informed by ongoing research in the cognitive neurosciences, there has been a tendency to offer deflationary or reductive explanations of self and selfidentity. The background to such accounts includes a complex history of the problem of personal identity from Hume to Parfit. Paul Ricoeur has provided an insightful perspective on this history based on his distinction between ipse identity and idem identity.1 My intention is not to rehearse that history, or even to u…Read more
  •  411
    Bodily self-awareness and object perception
    Theoria Et Historia Scientarum 7 (1): 53--68. 2003.
    Gallagher, S. 2003. Bodily self-awareness and object perception. _Theoria et Historia Scientiarum: International Journal for Interdisciplinary_ _Studies_, 7 (1) - in press.
  •  47
    Somatic Apathy
    Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 46 (1): 105-122. 2015.
    Muselmannwas a term used in German concentration camps to describe prisoners near death due to exhaustion, starvation, and helplessness. This paper suggests that the inhuman conditions in the concentration camps resulted in the development of a defensive sense of disownership toward the entire body. The body, in such cases, is reduced to a pure object. However, in the case of theMuselmannthis body-as-object is felt to belong to the captors, and as such is therefore identified as a tool to inflic…Read more
  •  96
    Hermeneutics and Education
    State University of New York Press. 1992.
    A study of the interface between philosophical hermeneutics and the philosophical theory of education, yielding a hermeneutical approach to education--an approach that calls into question the current models of educational experience and ...
  •  37
    Introduction
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 16 (3). 2008.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  624
    The self in contextualized action
    with Anthony J. Marcel
    Journal of Consciousness Studies 6 (4): 273. 2002.
    This paper suggests that certain traditional ways of analysing the self start off in situations that are abstract or detached from normal experience, and that the conclusions reached in such approaches are, as a result, inexact or mistaken. The paper raises the question of whether there are more contextualized forms of self- consciousness than those usually appealed to in philosophical or psychological analyses, and whether they can be the basis for a more adequate theoretical approach to the se…Read more
  •  119
    Active inference, enactivism and the hermeneutics of social cognition
    with Micah Allen
    Synthese 195 (6): 2627-2648. 2018.
    We distinguish between three philosophical views on the neuroscience of predictive models: predictive coding, predictive processing and predictive engagement. We examine the concept of active inference under each model and then ask how this concept informs discussions of social cognition. In this context we consider Frith and Friston’s proposal for a neural hermeneutics, and we explore the alternative model of enactivist hermeneutics.