University of Virginia
Corcoran Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2000
CV
Singapore, Singapore
Areas of Interest
Metaphysics
Philosophy of Mind
PhilPapers Editorships
Phenomenalism
  •  791
    Forms and objects of thought
    Linguistics and Philosophy 30 (1): 97-122. 2007.
    It is generally assumed that if it is possible to believe that p without believing that q, then there is some difference between the object of the thought that p and the object of the thought that q. This assumption is challenged in the present paper, opening the way to an account of epistemic opacity that improves on existing accounts, not least because it casts doubt on various arguments that attempt to derive startling ontological conclusions from seemingly innocent epistemic premises.
  •  389
    Normally, when we notice a change taking place, our conscious experience has a corresponding quality of phenomenal change. Here it is argued that one's experience can have this quality at or during a time when there is no change in which phenomenal properties one instantiates. This undermines a number of otherwise forceful arguments against leading metaphysical theories of change, but also requires these theories to construe change as a secondary quality, akin to color
  •  256
    Content Internalism about Indexical Thought
    American Philosophical Quarterly 46 (2). 2009.
    Properly understood, content internalism is the thesis that any difference between the representational contents of two individuals' mental states reduces to a difference in those individuals' intrinsic properties. Some of the strongest arguments against internalism turn on the possibility for two "doppelgangers" –- perfect physical and phenomenal duplicates -– to differ with respect to the contents of those of their mental states that they can express using terms such as "I," "here," and "now."…Read more