•  53
    It is often said that artificial intelligence (AI) will eventually take over some of our decision-making tasks and will implement solutions to problems directly and autonomously, even in high-stakes contexts like healthcare, finance, or the law. These are also the contexts most people usually bring up as examples to stress the importance of “AI ethics” This field usually aims at aligning machine decisions with human values so that we can expect the machine to take ethical considerations into acc…Read more
  •  2
    Perceptual science and the nature of perception
    Theoria: Revista de Teoría, Historia y Fundamentos de la Ciencia 37 (2): 149-162. 2022.
    Can philosophical theories of perception defer to perceptual science when fixing their ontological commitments regarding the objects of perception? Or in other words, can perceptual science inform us about the nature of perception? Many contemporary mainstream philosophers of perception answer affirmatively. However, in this essay I provide two arguments against this idea. On the one hand, I will argue that perceptual science is not committed to certain assumptions, relevant for determining perc…Read more
  •  89
    'AI for all' is a matter of social justice
    AI and Ethics 2 1-10. 2022.
    Artificial intelligence (AI) is a radically transformative technology (or system of technologies) that created new existential possibilities and new standards of well-being in human societies. In this article, I argue that to properly understand the increasingly important role AI plays in our society, we must consider its impacts on social justice. For this reason, I propose to conceptualize AI's transformative role and its socio-political implications through the lens of the theory of social ju…Read more
  •  101
    Enactivism and the “problem” of perceptual presence
    Synthese 198 (Suppl 1): 159-173. 2020.
    Alva Noë understands what he calls “perceptual presence” as the experience of whole, voluminous objects being ‘right there’, present for us in their entirety, even though not each and every part of them impinges directly on our senses at any given time. How is it possible that we perceptually experience voluminous objects as voluminous directly and apparently effortlessly, with no need of inferring their three-dimensionality from experience of the part of them that is directly stimulating our se…Read more