•  152
    Kant on self-identity
    Philosophical Review 91 (1): 41-72. 1982.
    Despite Kemp Smith's claims to the contrary, I show that there is good reason to believe that Kant was aware of Hume's attack on personal identity. My interpretive claim is that we can make sense of many of Kant's puzzling remarks in the subjective deduction by assuming that he was trying to reply to Hume's challenge. My substantive claim is that Kant succeeds in defending a notion of the self as a continuing sequence of informationally interdependent states.
  •  47
    Kant and the Mind
    Philosophical Review 104 (4): 590. 1995.
    Consciousness, self-consciousness, mental unity, and the necessary conditions for cognition are issues of paramount importance for two prima facie distinct intellectual endeavors: contemporary cognitive science and interpretations of Kant. The goal of Andrew Brook’s timely and useful book is to contribute to both of these projects by showing how a better understanding of Kant’s views can also illuminate current controversies about how to model the mind.
  •  15
    On Interpreting Kant's Thinker as Wittgenstein's 'I'
    Philosophical and Phenomenological Research 61 (1): 33-63. 2000.
    Although both Kant and Wittgenstein made claims about the "unknowability" of cognitive subjects, the current practice of assimilating their positions is mistaken. I argue that Allison's attempt to understand the Kantian self through the early Wittgenstein and McDowell's linking of Kant and the later Wittgenstein distort rather than illuminate. Against McDowell, I argue further that the Critique's analysis of the necessary conditions for cognition produces an account of the sources of epistemic n…Read more
  •  47
    Kant versus the Asymmetry Dogma
    Kant Yearbook 5 (1). 2013.
    One of the most widely accepted contemporary constraints on theories of self-knowledge is that they must account for the very different ways in which cognitive subjects know their own minds and the ways in which they know other minds. Through the influence of Peter Strawson, Kant is often taken to be an original source for this view. I argue that Kant is quite explicit in holding the opposite position. In a little discussed passage in the Paralogisms chapter, he argues that cognitive subjects ha…Read more
  •  83
    Book review. The logic of affect Paul Redding (review)
    Mind 110 (438): 539-542. 2001.
  •  72
    Kant on the faculty of apperception
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 25 (3): 589-616. 2017.
    Although I begin with a brief look at the idea that as a faculty of mind, apperception must be grounded in some power of the soul, my focus is on claims about the alleged noumenal import of some of Kant’s particular theses about the faculty of apperception: it is inexplicable, immaterial, and can provide evidence that humans are members of the intelligible world. I argue that when the claim of inexplicability is placed in the context of Kant’s standards for transcendental psychological explanati…Read more
  •  134
    What Is a Maxim?
    Philosophical Topics 31 (1-2): 215-243. 2003.
  •  33
    Review: Falkenstein, Lorne, Kant's Intuitionism (review)
    Philosophical Review 107 (1): 155-158. 1998.