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35Two Kinds of Explanation and Their SignificanceIn Ori Beck & Miloš Vuletić (eds.), Empirical Reason and Sensory Experience, Springer Verlag. pp. 157-179. 2024.There is a distinction between two kinds of explanation by content-involving states, a distinction that emerges most clearly when we consider explanations that involve representation by magnitudes. I illustrate the distinction, which is applicable to a wide variety of kinds of psychological states and processes, and applies also beyond the cases of representation by magnitudes. The distinction allows a new defence of the special kind of explanation by imagistic representation, and gives new reas…Read more
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22The Eirenic Position and Two Kinds of Explanation: Further ElaborationIn Ori Beck & Miloš Vuletić (eds.), Empirical Reason and Sensory Experience, Springer Verlag. pp. 207-220. 2024.As a result of movements by both of us, McDowell's and my position are in agreement on one important point: that the same modes of presentation feature both in the contents of perception and the contents of judgment. I discus further an issue on which we still differ, viz. whether the states that make judgments reasonable can be the same states as those we share with non-human animals. Gupta argues that modes of presentation never feature in the contents of perceptual judgments, and gives an exa…Read more
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1Moral rationalismIn Manuel Garcia-Carpintero & Josep Macià (eds.), Two-Dimensional Semantics, Oxford: Clarendon Press. 2006.
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Intuitive mechanics, psychological reality and the idea of a material objectIn Naomi Eilan, Rosaleen McCarthy & Bill Brewer (eds.), Spatial Representation: Problems in Philosophy and Psychology, Clarendon Press. 1999.
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6Response to C rispin W rightIn Crispin Wright, Barry C. Smith & Cynthia Macdonald (eds.), Knowing Our Own Minds, Clarendon Press. pp. 47-62. 2000.Wright takes it that Wittgenstein's main contribution to philosophical reflections on self‐knowledge is an explicit refusal to engage in the task that gives the ‘Cartesian’ conception of the mental, its captivating power: the task of explaining the distinctive features of our epistemic relation to our inner lives. Wright claims to find in Wittgenstein a two‐pronged argument to show that a ‘Cartesian’ conception cannot meet the supposed explanatory need. The picture mislocates Wittgenstein's targ…Read more
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329Joint attention: Its nature, reflexivity, and relation to common knowledgeIn Naomi Eilan, Christoph Hoerl, Teresa McCormack & Johannes Roessler (eds.), Joint Attention: Communication and Other Minds: Issues in Philosophy and Psychology, Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 298-324. 2005.The openness of joint awareness between two or more subjects is a perceptual phenomenon. It involves a certain mutual awareness between the subjects, an awareness that makes reference to that very awareness itself. Properly characterized, such awareness can generate iterated awareness ‘x is aware that y is aware that x is aware...’ to whatever level the subjects can sustain. The openness should not be characterized in terms of Lewis–Schiffer common knowledge, the conditions for which are not met…Read more
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111Transparency and Reflection: A Study of Self-Knowledge and the Nature of Mind, by Matthew Boyle (review)Mind 135 (538): 564-572. 2026.
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164Deductive Inference and Mental AgencyAnalytic Philosophy 67 (1): 25-37. 2026.To give a good account of deductive inference, we need to recognise two new relations, one in the realm of contents, the other in the psychological realm of mental action. When these new relations are properly coordinated, they can supply an account of what it is for a thinker to be making a deductive inference. The account endorses the condition that in deductive reasoning, a thinker must take the premises to support the conclusion. The account is distinguished from the positions of Broome, Ryl…Read more
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Perceptual contentIn Joseph Almog, John Perry & Howard Wettstein (eds.), Themes From Kaplan, Oxford University Press. 1989.
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182Action: Awareness, ownership, and knowledgeIn Johannes Roessler & Naomi Eilan (eds.), Agency and Self-Awareness: Issues in Philosophy and Psychology, Oxford University Press. 2003.
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10Scenarios, concepts, and perceptionIn Tim Crane (ed.), The Contents of Experience, Cambridge University Press. 1992.
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11Perceptual contentIn Joseph Almog, John Perry & Howard Wettstein (eds.), Themes From Kaplan, Oxford University Press. 1989.
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70Mental action and self-awarenessIn Lucy O'Brien & Matthew Soteriou (eds.), Mental actions, Oxford University Press. 2009.We often know what we are judging, what we are deciding, what problem we are trying to solve. We know not only the contents of our judgements, decidings and tryings; we also know that it is judgement, decision and attempted problem-solving in which we are engaged. How do we know these things?
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849IntroductionIn Paul Boghossian & Christopher Peacocke (eds.), New Essays on the A Priori, Oxford University Press. pp. 1-10. 2000.This collection of newly commissioned essays, edited by NYU philosophers Paul Boghossian and Christopher Peacocke, resumes the current surge of interest in the proper explication of the notion of a priori. The authors discuss the relations of the a priori to the notions of definition, meaning, justification, and ontology, explore how the concept figured historically in the philosophies of Leibniz, Kant, Frege, and Wittgenstein, and address its role in the contemporary philosophies of logic, math…Read more
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1Rödl on judgment, the first person, and perceptionIn James Conant & Jesse M. Mulder (eds.), Reading Rödl: on Self-consciousness and objectivity, Routledge. 2024.
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65HolismIn Bob Hale, Crispin Wright & Alexander Miller (eds.), A companion to the philosophy of language, Wiley-blackwell. 2017.The question must arise whether a doctrine which is attributed to all of Quine, Putnam, Davidson, Rorty, Gadamer, and Heidegger is possibly a doctrine which comes in more than one version. Even the most ardent taxonomist is likely to draw back from classifying the various actual and possible positions which emerge from the very tangled history of recent discussions of holism. This chapter approaches the matter by addressing a series of questions, starting with those which are most likely to aris…Read more
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1Perception and the first personIn Mohan Matthen (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the Philosophy of Perception, Oxford University Press Uk. 2015.
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1How is logical inference possible?In Brian Andrew Ball & Christoph Schuringa (eds.), The Act and Object of Judgment: Historical and Philosophical Perspectives, Routledge. 2019.
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1Epistemology, the constitutive, and the principle-based account of modalityIn Otávio Bueno & Scott Shalkowski (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Modality, Routledge. 2018.
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86New Essays on Normative Realism (edited book)Oxford University Press. forthcoming.Normativity is both one of the most important and ubiquitous of phenomena and, despite its historical centrality to philosophy, one of the least understood. The idea that there might be objective, attitude-independent, truths about what we ought to do (morality), what we ought to believe (rationality) or what we ought to appreciate (aesthetics), has always seemed very puzzling to philosophers, even though ordinary thought seems steeped in such judgments. Up until quite recently, the received vi…Read more
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87David Wiggins: A Personal Philosophical MemoirPhilosophy 97 (3): 269-274. 2022.My first encounter with David Wiggins’ thought occurred a few weeks before I took my undergraduate final examinations in Oxford in 1971. In Blackwell's Bookshop I came across a slim blue volume Identity and Spatio-Temporal Continuity. I purchased it and read it cover-to-cover the same day. It was immediately clear that this was contemporary writing in a different league from anything I had previously read on the topic.
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39Distinguishing the specific from the recognitional and the canonical, and the nature of ratiosBehavioral and Brain Sciences 44. 2021.There are three independent properties of a mode of presentation of a number: being specific; being recognitional; and being canonical. A perceptual m.p. of the form that many Fs is specific although it is neither recognitional nor canonical. The literature has not distinguished noncanonical from nonspecific m.p.s of numbers. Ratios are fundamentally ratios of magnitudes.
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273Debating the A Priori, by Paul Boghossian and Timothy WilliamsonMind 131 (523): 977-985. 2022.This lively, engaging, and timely book consists of eighteen essays on the a priori, nine of them new and nine previously published. Because positions on the a p.
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The Relation between Philosophical and Psychological Theories of ConceptsIn Andy Clark & Peter Millican (eds.), Connectionism, Concepts, and Folk Psychology: The Legacy of Alan Turing, Volume 2, Clarendon Press. 1996.
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The Relation between Philosophical and Psychological Theories of ConceptsIn Andy Clark & Peter Millican (eds.), Connectionism, Concepts, and Folk Psychology: The Legacy of Alan Turing, Volume II, Clarendon Press. 1999.
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125What is involved in the primacy of metaphysics?Philosophical Studies 178 (8): 2745-2757. 2020.The notion of explanatory priority is clarified. For A to be explanatory prior to B is for the correct account of the individuation of B to mention A, but not conversely. Exploring the relations of explanatory priority between entities does not involve the impossible enterprise of explaining why individuating conditions are as they are. Use-theoretic accounts of meaning and content are consistent with the claims of The Primacy of Metaphysics if they essentially involve a reference relation; and …Read more
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170The Distinctive Character of Musical ExperienceBritish Journal of Aesthetics 60 (2): 183-197. 2020.The goal of this paper is to use the dual resources of the contemporary theory of intentional content and the notion of experiencing something metaphorically as something else, which I have defended in my earlier work, to explain the distinctive character of musical experience. These resources are used to explain Felix Mendelssohn’s point that emotional content in music can be more specific than anything capturable in language; to give an account of the role of metaphor in musical experience tha…Read more
Christopher Peacocke
Columbia University
Institute of Philosophy, School of Advanced Study, University of London
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Institute of Philosophy, School of Advanced Study, University of LondonOther (Part-time)
New York City, New York, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Metaphysics and Epistemology |
| Science, Logic, and Mathematics |
| Other Academic Areas |