•  1
    ¿Piensan los animales? La respuesta expresiva
    Revista de Filosofía (Madrid) 1-15. 2022.
  • In the historical context of the ancient Roman Empire, especially in Southwestern Spain, this study employs fuzzy logic methodology to conduct a comprehensive comparative analysis of topographical measurement instruments. These instruments—specifically the groma, surveyor's square, dioptra, chorobate, and odometer—were instrumental in shaping the region's infrastructure and played a crucial role in ancient engineering projects. Fuzzy logic is strategically utilized to assign fuzzy values ranging…Read more
  • The Farga Rossell mechanism, a hallmark of traditional engineering from the historic iron industry of Andorra, represents the confluence of craftsmanship and technological innovation of its time. During its operational years, significant advancements such as the use of water power, the integration of waterpowered bellows, and the automation of hammering processes revolutionized production efficiency. This study delves deep into the mechanical engineering principles underpinning the design of Far…Read more
  •  58
    Peacocke y el Concepto de Primera Persona
    Theoria: Revista de Teoría, Historia y Fundamentos de la Ciencia 17 (1): 161-185. 2002.
    Peacocke's explanation of the first-person concept provides non-circu/ar possession conditions for such a concept, accommodating two different constraints: the noncircularity requirement and Evans's Thesis. In this paper, it is argued that Peacocke's explanation faces some difficulties: on the one hand, it appears unable to meet a serious objection facing the non-circularity requirement; on the other hand, it misunderstands the constitutive constraints imposed by Evans's Thesis on a correct acco…Read more
  •  246
    Where is cognitive science heading?
    with Francisco Calvo Garzón
    Minds and Machines 19 (3): 301-318. 2009.
    According to Ramsey (Representation reconsidered, Cambridge University Press, New York, 2007 ), only classical cognitive science, with the related notions of input–output and structural representations, meets the job description challenge (the challenge to show that a certain structure or process serves a representational role at the subpersonal level). By contrast, connectionism and other nonclassical models, insofar as they exploit receptor and tacit notions of representation, are not genuinel…Read more
  •  9
    The Nonconceptual in Concept Acquisition
    Theoria: Revista de Teoría, Historia y Fundamentos de la Ciencia 22 (1): 93-110. 2007.
    The objective of this paper is to discuss the nature of nonconceptual, as opposed to conceptual, states and their content, by exploring the suggestion that the distinction between the conceptual and the nonconceptual be mapped onto the distinction between the linguistic and the nonlinguistic. This approach gives special relevance to our intuitions about the cognitive relationship between small children and adults, especially regarding the acquisition of concepts, in the course of normal cognitiv…Read more
  •  39
    Expression and the transparency of belief
    European Journal of Philosophy 27 (1): 136-147. 2019.
    Questions like “Do you believe that p?” can be meant deliberatively (i.e., the question whether to believe that p) or self‐ascriptively (i.e., the question whether the addressee already believes that p). Therefore, an utterance of “I believe that p” can be a proper answer either to a deliberative or to a self‐ascriptive question. In the latter case, an utterance of “I believe that p” is a self‐ascription of belief, but in the former case, it is not. Instead, it is an episode of the belief formed…Read more
  •  17
    The Nonconceptual in Concept Acquisition
    Theoria 22 (1): 93-110. 2009.
    This article takes as its starting-point that a viable account of concept acquisition must be ontogenetically sound, and analyses in detail two alternative accounts of concept acquisition, one conceptualist and the other non-conceptualist, concluding that the conceptualist account is to be preferred.
  •  60
    Direct Perceptual Access to Other Minds
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 26 (1): 24-39. 2018.
    It is sometimes claimed that we perceive people’s mental states in their expressive features. This paper clarifies the claim by contrasting two possible readings, depending on whether expression is conceived relationally or non-relationally. A crucial difference between both readings is that only a non-relational conception of expression ensures direct access to other minds. The paper offers an argument for a non-relational conception of expression, and therefore for the view that we directly pe…Read more
  •  22
    A Wittgensteinian conception of animal minds
    Grazer Philosophische Studien 88 (1): 101-122. 2013.
    There is a recent popular reconstruction of Wittgenstein's thinking about animal minds, according to which animals and humans share a set of expressive abilities, prior to, and independent of, the onset of linguistic-cum-conceptual abilities; a reconstruction that in turn entails a duality of expression and linguistic-cum-conceptual abilities, in adult humans. This paper contends that the reconstruction is implausible and at odds with Wittgenstein's thinking, regarding both the developing minds …Read more
  •  13
    The expressive case for animal self-consciousness
    Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 1-22. forthcoming.
    An obstacle for the attribution of self-consciousness to animals is that they lack the linguistic ability to use the first-person pronoun. To overcome the obstacle, current tests rely on the availability of behavioural measures of self-consciousness in the absence of language. However, this is not sufficient, for unless a distinction is drawn between epistemic and expressive varieties of self-consciousness, further puzzles threaten the validity of the research. This paper defends the distinction…Read more
  •  438
    La Escuela de Salamanca y su proyección iberoamericana (edited book)
    with José Luis Gutiérrez, José Luis Egío García, and David Torrijos Castrillejo
    Sindéresis. 2021.
    A book with all the abstracts of the talks held in the conference "La Escuela de Salamanca y su proyección iberoamericana": University San Dámaso (Madrid), 13th-15th October 2021.
  •  34
    How emotions are perceived
    Synthese 199 (3-4): 9433-9461. 2021.
    This paper claims that we have direct and complete perceptual access to other people’s emotions in their bodily and behavioural expression. The claim is understood, not by analogy with the perception of three-dimensional objects or physical processes, but as a form of Gestalt perception. In addition, talk of direct perceptual access to others’ emotions is shown not to entail a behaviourist view of mind; and talk of complete perceptual access is shown to include both the phenomenological characte…Read more
  •  15
    Pieces of mind: The proper domain of psychological predicates
    Tandf: Philosophical Psychology 33 (8): 1185-1203. 2020.
    Volume 33, Issue 8, November 2020, Page 1185-1203.
  •  6
    Cinco libros en uno: los Salmos
    Salmanticensis 61 (1): 39-54. 2014.
  •  12
    Reply to Figdor
    Philosophical Psychology 33 (8): 1209-1213. 2020.
    In her helpful response, Carrie Figdor provides answers to the two criticisms I raised against her defense of literalism in my review article. In doing so, she usefully clarifies the argument for t...
  •  33
    Fake Barns and Our Epistemological Theorizing
    Crítica. Revista Hispanoamericana de Filosofía 50 (148): 29-53. 2018.
    Pure virtue epistemology faces the fake barn challenge. This paper explains how it can be met. Thus, it is argued that the thought experiment contains a hidden ambiguity concerning the visual ability typically ascribed to, or denied, fake barn subjects. Disambiguation shows fake barn subjects to have limited knowledge of the target proposition. This accords with a pure virtue-theoretic conception of knowledge that predicts and explains all the intuitions elicited by the thought experiment. As a …Read more
  •  29
    A Wittgensteinian View of Mind and Self-Knowledge
    Philosophia 48 (3): 993-1013. 2020.
    This paper defends a Wittgenstein-inspired conception of the nature of mind and self-knowledge. Thus, it is claimed that the mind is to be conceived as expressive behaviour; and that knowledge of one’s own mind is not to be thought of as a matter of first-person access, i.e. a special sort of access available to oneself alone, but rather as a matter of ordinary access, similar to other people’s. It is also argued that this conception does not undermine the distinctness of the first-person perspe…Read more
  • Positivismo y ciencia: La controversia en torno al enfoque metodológico duhemiano
    Diálogos. Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad de Puerto Rico 36 (77): 25-46. 2001.
  • Cinco libros en uno: Los Salmos
    Salmanticensis 61 (1): 39-54. 2014.
  •  14
    Implications of biotechnology for Public Health in Cuba
    Humanidades Médicas 14 (1): 206-219. 2014.
    La biotecnología ha originado inestimables avances para la salud de la población cubana. Su gran impacto incide en los indicadores de salud de la población, en la actualidad sus productos se extienden a varias naciones con lo cual se ha establecido como un importante renglón de exportación. En consecuencia, fundamentar la repercusión de los logros de la biotecnología para la Salud Pública cubana constituye el objetivo principal de este artículo. Biotechnology is a scientific activity which has r…Read more
  •  15
    A continental approach to rationality and mind
    Teorema: International Journal of Philosophy 25 (3): 111-122. 2006.
  •  1
    Explicaciones naturalistas de la conciencia fenoménica
    Teorema: International Journal of Philosophy 27 (3): 5-27. 2008.