• Review of Jonardon Ganeri: Attention Not Self (review)
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 97 (1): 194-207. 2018.
  •  24
    Attention and Attentiveness: A defence of the argument for adverbialism
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy. forthcoming.
    In recent philosophical work on attention, several authors have employed versions of an argument purporting to show that attention is not identical to any cognitive process. Others have criticised this argument. The present article addresses their various criticisms, and shows the original argument to be a valid one. It also shows that this argument cannot be resisted by taking attention to be a disjunction of several processes, by taking it be a genus of process that is composed of various spec…Read more
  •  153
    The position that Stokes’s Thinking and Perceiving aims to overthrow is committed to the idea that the facts about one’s propositional attitudes and the facts about one’s perceptual experiences are alike grounded in facts about representations (in various formats) that are being held in a short or long term memory store, so that computations can be performed upon them. Claims about modularity are claims about the distinctness of these memory stores, and of these representations. One way in which…Read more
  •  59
    Emancipatory Attention
    Philosophers' Imprint. forthcoming.
    The aim of this paper is to show that, for the purposes of addressing the epistemic aspects of systemic injustice, we need a notion of emancipatory attention. When the epistemic and ethical elements of an injustice are intertwined, it is a misleading idealisation to think of these epistemological elements as calling for the promotion of knowledge through a rational dialectic. Taking them to instead call for a campaign of consciousness-raising runs into difficulties of its own, when negotiating…Read more
  • The moral psychology of salience
    In Sophie Archer (ed.), Salience: A Philosophical Inquiry, Routledge. pp. 140-158. 2022.
    The moral success or failure of our conduct is sometimes determined by the rationality of our practical decision making, and sometimes by the continence with which we act on the decisions that we have made. Both factors depend on the things that we find salient. And rather than making some culpable error in reasoning, or failing to resist some temptation, we often behave poorly just because some important aspect of the situation never became salient to us. We might also act well only because the…Read more
  •  646
    What is Attention? Adverbialist Theories
    WIREs Cognitive Science 14 (1). 2023.
    This article presents theories of attention that attempt to derive their answer to the question of what attention is from their answers to the question of what it is for some activity to be done attentively. Such theories provide a distinctive account of the difficulties that are faced by the attempt to locate processes in the brain by which the phenomena of attention can be explained. Their account does not share the pessimism of theories suggesting that the concept of attention is defective. I…Read more
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  •  256
    Review of Mark Solms' The Hidden Spring (review)
    TLS: The Times Literary Supplement 6173 (July 23): 25. 2021.
    Brief review of Mark Solms' "The Hidden Spring: A Journey to the Source of Consciousness"
  •  139
    Famous Wet Raincoat: Review of Erik Larson The Myth of Artificial Intelligence (review)
    TLS: The Times Literary Supplement 6169 (June 25th): 25. 2021.
    Book review
  • Mind the gaps (review)
    TLS: The Times Literary Supplement 6153 27. 2021.
    Review of Matthew Cobb 'The Idea of the Brain: The past and future of neuroscience'
  •  4
    Consciousness and Attention
    In Uriah Kriegel (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the Philosophy of Consciousness, Oxford University Press. 2020.
    As a tactic for preventing an enquiry into attention’s relationship to consciousness from lapsing into ill-definition, this chapter treats ‘attention’ as a term defined by the role that is assigned to it in our explanations of empirically established psychological phenomena (especially those involving the modulation of reaction times). It reviews evidence showing that such modulations are associated with processing that stands in various relations to consciousness. The psychological phenomena th…Read more
  •  47
    The Role of Attention in Multisensory Integration
    Multisensory Research 31 (3). 2020.
    Evidence concerning the relationship between attention and multisensory integration has long been thought to lead us into a paradox. The paradox has its roots in evidence that seems to show that attention exerts an influence on integration, and that integration also exerts an influence on attention. This creates an appearance of paradox only if it is understood to imply that particular instances of the integration process must occur both before and after particular instances of the attention pro…Read more
  • The process of inference
    In Rowland Stout (ed.), Process, Action, and Experience, Oxford University Press. pp. 149-167. 2018.
    The set of entities that serves as the domain for our discourse about the mind is metaphysically heterogenous. It includes processes, events, properties, modes, and states. In the latter part of the twentieth century, philosophers started to suppose that a philosophical theory of the mind should be primarily concerned with the explanation of mental states. Those states could then be mentioned in the explanations that would need to be given for mental entities of other sorts. If, for example, we …Read more
  • Shooting the Messenger (review)
    TLS: The Times Literary Supplement 6060 35. 2019.
  •  124
    Spies and Pies (review)
    TLS: The Times Literary Supplement 6008 36. 2018.
  •  101
    Understanding Mental Disorders aims to help current and future psychiatrists, and those who work with them, to think critically about the ethical, conceptual, and methodological questions that are raised by the theory and practice of psychiatry. It considers questions that concern the mind’s relationship to the brain, the origins of our norms for thinking and behavior, and the place of psychiatry in medicine, and in society more generally. With a focus on the current debates around psychiatry’s …Read more
  •  448
    Wittgenstein on the duration and timing of mental phenomena: episodes, understanding and rule-following
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 26 (6): 1153-1175. 2018.
    Wittgenstein’s later works are full of questions about the timing and duration of mental phenomena. These questions are often awkward ones, and Wittgenstein seems to take their awkwardness to be philosophically revealing, but if we ask what it is that these questions reveal then different interpretations are possible. This paper suggests that there are at least six different ways in which the timing of mental phenomena can be awkward. By identifying these we can give sense to some of Wittgens…Read more
  •  56
    The relationship between intelligent systems and their environment is at the forefront of research in cognitive science. The Unexplained Intellect: Complexity, Time, and the Metaphysics of Embodied Thought shows how computational complexity theory and analytic metaphysics can together illuminate long-standing questions about the importance of that relationship. It argues that the most basic facts about a mind cannot just be facts about mental states, but must include facts about the dynamic, int…Read more
  •  324
    Enactive processing of the syntax of sign language
    with Graham H. Turner
    Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 18 (2): 317-332. 2019.
    It is unfashionable to suggest that enactive processes - including some that involve the mirror neuron system - might contribute to the comprehension of sign language. The present essay formulates and defends a version of that unfashionable suggestion, as it applies to certain forms of syntactic processing. There is evidence that has been thought to weigh against any such suggestion, coming from neuroimaging experiments and from the study of Deaf aphasics. In both cases it is shown to be unpersu…Read more
  •  177
    Skylduboðið um að veita athygli
    Hugur: Tímarit Um Heimspeki 28 17-28. 2017.
  •  451
    Autism and ‘disease’: The semantics of an ill-posed question
    Philosophical Psychology 30 (8): 1126-1140. 2017.
    It often seems incorrect to say that psychiatric conditions are diseases, and equally incorrect to say that they are not. This results in what would seem to be an unsatisfactory stalemate. The present essay examines the considerations that have brought us to such a stalemate in our discussions of autism. It argues that the stalemate in this particular case is a reflection of the fact that we need to find the logical space for a position that rejects both positive and negative answers. It then su…Read more
  •  1131
    Embodied Demonstratives: A Reply to Wu
    Mind 122 (485): 231-239. 2013.
    Although Wayne Wu correctly identifies a flaw in the way in which my 2009 article frames the debate about ‘zombie action’, he fails in his attempts to strengthen the case for thinking that our actions are under less conscious control than we usually imagine. His argument, like the arguments that my earlier paper addressed, can be blocked by allowing that an embodied demonstrative concept can contribute contents to a visual experience
  •  486
    Attention in the absence of consciousness?
    Trends in Cognitive Sciences 12 (2): 44. 2008.
    A response to Christof Koch and Naotsugu Tsuchiya's 'Attention and Consciousness: Two Distinct Brain Processes'.
  •  1858
    The Performative Limits of Poetry
    British Journal of Aesthetics 53 (1): 55-70. 2013.
    J. L. Austin showed that performative speech acts can fail in various ways, and that the ways in which they fail can often be revealing, but he was not concerned with understanding performative failures that occur in the context of poetry. Geoffrey Hill suggests, in both his poetry and his prose writings, that these failures are more interesting than Austin realized. This article corrects Maximilian de Gaynesford’s misunderstanding of Hill’s treatment of this point. It then explains the way in w…Read more
  •  352
    The Contents of Olfactory Experience
    Journal of Consciousness Studies 17 (11-12): 173-79. 2010.
    Clare Batty has recently argued that the content of human olfactory experience is 'a very weak kind of abstract, or existentially quantified content', and so that 'there is no way things smell'. Her arguments are based on two claims. Firstly, that there is no intuitive distinction between olfactory hallucination and olfactory illusion. Secondly, that olfaction 'does not present smell at particular locations', and 'seems disengaged from any particular object'. The present article shows both of th…Read more
  •  168
    David Milner and Melvyn Goodale, and the many psychologists and philosophers who have been influenced by their work, claim that ‘the visual system that gives us our visual experience of the world is not the same system that guides our movements in the world’. The arguments that have been offered for this surprising claim place considerable weight on two sources of evidence — visual form agnosia and the reaching behaviour of normal subjects when picking up objects that induce visual illusions. Th…Read more
  •  339
    Beauty, desire and ignorance
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 16 (4). 2008.
    A critical notice of Alexander Nehamas's Only a Promise of Happiness: The Place of Beauty in a World of Art.