•  51
    Human attention has become a touchstone of widespread concern across the humanities, sciences, and broader culture in much of the world. The emergence of a new, heavily capitalized, and technologically sophisticated industry “commodifying” human attention (what has been called “human fracking”) has given rise to a transdisciplinary conversation about attentional problems. Philosophical analyses of attention take on special importance in the context of these new developments. Drawing on historica…Read more
  •  13
    Index
    with D. Graham Burnett and Justin E. H. Smith
    In D. Graham Burnett & Justin E. H. Smith (eds.), Scenes of Attention: Essays on Mind, Time, and the Senses, Columbia University Press. pp. 349-365. 2023.
  •  78
    Michael S. Mahoney, 1939–2008
    with Jed Z. Buchwald
    Isis 100 (3): 623-626. 2009.
  •  59
    Introduction: Thinking Attention
    In D. Graham Burnett & Justin E. H. Smith (eds.), Scenes of Attention: Essays on Mind, Time, and the Senses, Columbia University Press. pp. 1-20. 2023.
  •  49
    In search of the third bird: exemplary essays from the proceedings of ESTAR(SER), 2001-2021 (edited book)
    with Catherine L. Hansen and Justin E. H. Smith
    Strange Attractor Press. 2021.
    The real history of the covey of attention-artists who call themselves "The Birds." A great deal of uncertainty--and even some genuine confusion--surrounds the origin, evolution, and activities of the so-called Avis Tertia or "Order of the Third Bird." Sensational accounts of this "attentional cult" emphasize histrionic rituals, tragic trance-addictions, and the covert dissemination of obscurantist ontologies of the art object. Hieratic, ecstatic, and endlessly evasive, the Order attracts sensua…Read more
  •  93
    Introduction
    Isis 98 (2): 310-314. 2007.
    From Galileo to the Bhopal tort litigation, Scopes to OncoMouse®, Lysenko to the lie detector, the agonistic and alethic forum of the courtroom has offered unique opportunities to witness science and scientists being made and unmade. Evolving legal systems have consistently been forced to draw on (or defensibly away from) scientific knowledge, scientific methods, and scientific experts in the pursuit of truth and justice. At the same time, courts—in many ways the original site for the production…Read more