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2839Consciousness and information integrationSynthese 198 763-792. 2021.Integration information theories posit that the integration of information is necessary and/or sufficient for consciousness. In this paper, we focus on three of the most prominent information integration theories: Information Integration Theory, Global Workspace Theory, and Attended Intermediate-Level Theory. We begin by explicating each theory and key concepts they utilize. We then argue that the current evidence indicates that the integration of information is neither necessary nor sufficient …Read more
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176What’s Wrong with Designing People to Serve?Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 22 (4): 993-1015. 2019.In this paper I argue, contrary to recent literature, that it is unethical to create artificial agents possessing human-level intelligence that are programmed to be human beings’ obedient servants. In developing the argument, I concede that there are possible scenarios in which building such artificial servants is, on net, beneficial. I also concede that, on some conceptions of autonomy, it is possible to build human-level AI servants that will enjoy full-blown autonomy. Nonetheless, the main th…Read more
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151Massive Technological Unemployment Without Redistribution: A Case for Cautious OptimismScience and Engineering Ethics 25 (5): 1389-1407. 2019.This paper argues that even though massive technological unemployment will likely be one of the results of automation, we will not need to institute mass-scale redistribution of wealth to deal with its consequences. Instead, reasons are given for cautious optimism about the standards of living the newly unemployed workers may expect in the fully-automated future. It is not claimed that these predictions will certainly bear out. Rather, they are no less likely to come to fruition than the predict…Read more
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118Could there be scattered subjects of consciousness?Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 18 (4): 775-789. 2019.There is a debate between David Barnett and Rory Madden concerning the features that “our naïve conception of conscious subjects” has. While Barnett claims that our conception demands that conscious subjects be simple, Madden holds that our conception demands that conscious beings be topologically integrated. In this paper, I aim to bring some empirical results concerning the rubber-hand illusions and bilocation illusions to bear on this topic. While I do not reach a definitive resolution to the…Read more
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126On the Relation Between Visualized Space and Perceived SpaceReview of Philosophy and Psychology 9 (3): 567-583. 2018.In this paper, I will examine the question of the space of visual imagery. I will ask whether in visually imagining an object or a scene, we also thereby imagine that object or scene as being in a space unrelated to the space we’re simultaneously perceiving or whether it is the case that the space of visual imagination is experienced as connected to the space of perceptual experience. I will argue that the there is no distinction between the spatial content of visualization and the spatial conte…Read more
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152Moods, Colored Lenses, and Emotional Disconnection: a Comment on GallegosPhilosophia 46 (3): 625-632. 2018.In “Moods Are Not Colored Lenses: Perceptualism and the Phenomenology of Moods” Francisco Gallegos presents a challenge to a popular view about the phenomenology of being in a mood that he calls “perceptualism”. In this essay, I offer a partial defense of perceptualism about moods and argue that perceptualism and Gallegos’s preferred Heideggerian alternative need not be viewed as in opposition to one another.
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256How perception generates, preserves, and mediates justificationInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 61 (5-6): 559-568. 2018.“The Epistemic Significance of Perceptual Learning” defends the view that perceptual experiences generate justification in virtue of their presentational phenomenology, preserve past justification in virtue of the influence of perceptual learning on them, and thereby allow new beliefs formed on their basis to also be partly based on that past justification. “The Real Epistemic Significance of Perceptual Learning” mounts challenges to these three claims. Here we explore some avenues for respondin…Read more
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1046Balint’s Syndrome, Visual Motion Perception, and Awareness of SpaceErkenntnis 83 (6): 1265-1284. 2018.Kant, Wittgenstein, and Husserl all held that visual awareness of objects requires visual awareness of the space in which the objects are located. There is a lively debate in the literature on spatial perception whether this view is undermined by the results of experiments on a Balint’s syndrome patient, known as RM. I argue that neither of two recent interpretations of these results is able to explain RM’s apparent ability to experience motion. I outline some ways in which each interpretation m…Read more
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173What Makes Up a Mood Experience?Journal of Consciousness Studies 24 (5-6): 104-127. 2017.In this paper I argue that the phenomenal character of a mood experience wholly depends on affective modifications (appropriate for the mood in question) to the phenomenal characters of one's non-mood experiences. I argue that this view accounts for all distinctive aspects of mood phenomenology, in contrast to currently existing accounts of moods, each of which faces trouble accounting for some distinctive aspect of mood experience. I also explain how my view allows for holding both that moods s…Read more
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281Cognitive Penetrability and High‐Level Properties in Perception: Unrelated Phenomena?Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 96 (4): 469-486. 2015.There has been a recent surge in interest in two questions concerning the nature of perceptual experience; viz. the question of whether perceptual experience is sometimes cognitively penetrated and that of whether high-level properties are presented in perceptual experience. Only rarely have thinkers been concerned with the question of whether the two phenomena are interestingly related. Here we argue that the two phenomena are not related in any interesting way. We argue further that this lack …Read more
Poznań, Greater Poland Voivodeship, Poland
Areas of Specialization
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Ethics of Artificial Intelligence |