•  56
    Centering the narrative: Dennett on the self
    Philosophical Psychology 39 (3): 994-1008. 2026.
    Daniel Dennett’s expansive works repeatedly discuss the nature of the Self. As with his energetic reconstruals of qualia, consciousness, and free will (among others), Dennett debunks the existence of the Self as a reified entity in the brain or mind, or as equivalent to one’s body. Instead, he proposes to understand the self as a “center of narrative gravity” (CNG), an abstract entity. This paper addresses the CNG, working toward a positive account that explicates the double metaphor via the ana…Read more
  • Subjective Time: From Past to Future
    In , Mit Press. pp. 309-321. 2014.
  • The Disunity of Time
    In , Mit Press. pp. 657-663. 2014.
  •  26
    Not Dead Yet: Fragility and Phenomenology in a Time of Plague
    Constructivist Foundations 16 (3): 253-255. 2021.
    One manifestation of fragility in the pandemic era is the fragility of social systems, and especially the revealed instability of science and other forms of understanding, when opposed to the …
  •  40
    Protention and Predictive Processing: The Wave of the Future
    Constructivist Foundations 13 (1): 98-99. 2017.
    Gallagher’s main claim can be enhanced neurophenomenologically. In his 1907 lectures Thing and Space, Husserl argued that perception in general is enactive. Moreover, the neuroscientific theory of predictive processing connects neatly to a future-oriented phenomenology.
  • The Limits of Cognitive Liberalism
    Behavior and Philosophy 14 (1): 1. 1986.
  •  26
    Time after time
    In Shimon Edelman, Tomer Fekete & Neta Zach (eds.), Being in Time: Dynamical Models of Phenomenal Experience, John Benjamins. pp. 88--1. 2012.
  •  71
    The limits of cognitive liberalism
    Behaviorism 14 (1): 1-14. 1986.
    The central characteristic of cognitive explanations of behavior is the appeal to inner representations. I examine the grounds which justify representational explanations, seeking the minimum conditions which organisms must meet to be candidates for such explanations. I first discuss Fodor's proposal that representationality be attributed to systems which respond to nonnomic properties, arguing that the distinction between the nomic and nonnomic in perception is fatally ambiguous. Then I turn to…Read more
  •  83
    An innovative theory of consciousness, drawing on the phenomenology of Edmund Husserl and supported by brain-imaging, presented in the form of a hardboiled ..
  •  142
    Simple Minds
    MIT Press. 1989.
    Drawing on philosophy, neuroscience, and artificial intelligence, Simple Minds explores the construction of the mind from the matter of the brain.
  •  47
    Many times over: A brief reply to Lee and Klincewicz
    Consciousness and Cognition 21 (2): 711-712. 2012.
  •  89
    Double trouble for gestalt bubbles
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 26 (4): 417-418. 2003.
    The “Gestalt Bubble” model of Lehar is not supported by the evidence offered. The author invalidly concludes that spatial properties in experience entail an explicit volumetric spatial representation in the brain. The article also exaggerates the extent to which phenomenology reveals a completely three-dimensional scene in perception.
  •  143
    Terra cognita: From functional neuroimaging to the map of the mind (review)
    Brain and Mind 1 (1): 93-116. 2000.
    For more than a century the paradigm inspiringcognitive neuroscience has been modular and localist.Contemporary research in functional brain imaginggenerally relies on methods favorable to localizingparticular functions in one or more specific brainregions. Meanwhile, connectionist cognitive scientistshave celebrated the computational powers ofdistributed processing, and pioneered methods forinterpreting distributed representations. This papertakes a connectionist approach to functionalneuroimag…Read more
  •  88
    Access denied
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 18 (2): 261-262. 1995.
    The information processing that constitutes accessconsciousness is not sufficient to make a representational state conscious in any sense. Standard examples of computation without consciousness undermine A-consciousness, and Block's cases seem to derive their plausibility from a lurking phenomenal awareness. That is, people and other minded systems seem to have access-consciousness only insofar as the state accessed is a phenomenal one, or the state resulting from access is phenomenal, or both.
  •  111
    Commentary on towards a design-based analysis of emotional episodes
    Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 3 (2): 127-128. 1996.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Commentary on “Towards a Design-Based Analysis of Emotional Episodes”Dan Lloyd (bio)To think about grief is to think about many things. My one-year-old daughter was practicing opening and closing a cabinet door as I puzzled over a response to Wright, Sloman, and Beaudoin’s “Toward a Design-Based Analysis of Emotional Episodes.” She was completely absorbed in her project, and as I watched my elf at her task, I thought about the voices…Read more
  •  73
    The scope and ingenuity of evolutionary systems
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 6 (3): 368-369. 1983.
  •  27
    Consciousness and its discontents
    Communication and Cognition: An Interdisciplinary Quarterly Journal 30 (3-4): 273-284. 1997.
    Our heads are full of representations, according to cognitive science. It might seem inevitable that conscious states are a type of brain-based representation, but in this paper I argue that representation and consciousness each form conceptually distinct domains. Representational content depends on context, usually causal, as shown by familiar cases in which context varies while brain states do not -- twin earth cases and brains-in-vats, for example. But these same cases show that conscious con…Read more
  •  179
    Studying the mind from the inside out
    Brain and Mind 3 (1): 243-59. 2002.
    Good research requires, among other virtues,(i) methods that yield stable experimentalobservations without arbitrary (post hoc)assumptions, (ii) logical interpretations ofthe sources of observations, and (iii) soundinferences to general causal mechanismsexplaining experimental results by placing themin larger explanatory contexts. In TheNew Phrenology , William Uttal examines theresearch tradition of localization, and findsit deficient in all three virtues, whetherbased on lesion studies or on n…Read more
  •  95
    Neural correlates of temporality: Default mode variability and temporal awareness
    Consciousness and Cognition 21 (2): 695-703. 2012.
    The continual background awareness of duration is an essential structure of consciousness, conferring temporal extension to the many objects of awareness within the evanescent sensory present. Seeking the possible neural correlates of ubiquitous temporal awareness, this article reexamines fMRI data from off-task “default mode” periods in 25 healthy subjects studied by Grady et al. , 2005). “Brain reading” using support vector machines detected information specifying elapsed time, and further ana…Read more
  •  209
    Functional MRI and the study of human consciousness
    Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 14 (6): 818-831. 2002.
    & Functional brain imaging offers new opportunities for the begin with single-subject (preprocessed) scan series, and study of that most pervasive of cognitive conditions, human consider the patterns of all voxels as potential multivariate consciousness. Since consciousness is attendant to so much encodings of phenomenal information. Twenty-seven subjects of human cognitive life, its study requires secondary analysis from the four studies were analyzed with multivariate of multiple experimental …Read more
  •  57
    According to Aristotle, "to be learning something is the greatest of pleasures not only to the philosopher but also to the rest of mankind," (Poetics 1448b). But even as he affirms the unbounded human capacity for integrating new experience with existing knowledge, he alludes to a significant exception: "The sight of certain things gives us pain, but we enjoy looking at the most exact images of them, whether the forms of animals which we greatly despise or of corpses." Our capacity for learning …Read more
  •  8
    It wasn't that hard to be a polymath in ancient Greece. All it meant, when you come down to it, was that you could write a poem, speak classical Greek (not very difficult in the circumstances) and understand the mechanics of the Archimedes' screw. Today it's not so easy. Arts and sciences have, for the most part, diverged to an alarming extent, with those on the arts side likely to be as hard-pressed to explain the technologies that increasingly govern our world as a member of a "lost" tribe in …Read more
  •  74
    Popping the thought balloon
    In Don Ross, Andrew Brook & David Thompson (eds.), Dennett’s Philosophy: A Comprehensive Assessment, Mit Press. pp. 169--99. 2000.
    Many recovering dualists find that the old Cartesian demons are hard to exorcise. Dual substance abuse manifests itself not only as metaphysical dualism, but as a pervasive epistemological framework that creates an unhealthy codependent relationship between scientific realism and phenomenology. Daniel Dennett has led philosophers to recognize many of the symptoms of creeping crypto Cartesianism. In this paper, I try to take Dennett to the limit: Descartes lives on, I argue, in the very heart of …Read more