•  137
    IX—Perceptual Activity and Bodily Awareness
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 115 (2pt2): 147-165. 2015.
    Bodily awareness is a kind of perceptual awareness of the body that we do not usually count as a sense. I argue that that there is an overlooked agential difference between bodily awareness and perception in the five familiar senses: a difference in what is involved in perceptual activity in sight, hearing, touch taste and smell on the one hand, and bodily awareness on the other
  •  89
    Perception and its Modalities (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2015. 2015.
  •  374
    Sniffing and smelling
    Philosophical Studies 162 (2): 401-419. 2013.
    In this paper I argue that olfactory experience, like visual experience, is exteroceptive: it seems to one that odours, when one smells them, are external to the body, as it seems to one that objects are external to the body when one sees them. Where the sense of smell has been discussed by philosophers, it has often been supposed to be non-exteroceptive. The strangeness of this philosophical orthodoxy makes it natural to ask what would lead to its widespread acceptance. I argue that philosopher…Read more