•  12
    Against the claim that technological enhancements are largely good for us, I argue that instantaneous bypassing enhancements—enhancements that deprive the subject of opportunities for further self-development of that capacity—can be bad for us. Through an analysis of the existential phenomenology of Martin Heidegger and Maurice Merleau-Ponty, I show how human existence is temporally situated, and how our projections towards our future becoming imbue our experiences with value and significance. B…Read more
  •  462
    Although the notion of the higher pleasures is central to John Stuart Mill’s ethical hedonism, conspicuously absent from _Utilitarianism_ is any substantive explanation of the nature of the higher pleasures, resulting in several interpretative difficulties including the charge that Mill’s theory faces a dilemma that severely undercuts the consistency of his ethical theory. The mystery of why Mill would be so evasive in explaining the higher pleasures can be solved by analyzing the influence of A…Read more
  •  62
    Whether metacognitive experiences should be considered evidence for or against cognitive phenomenology is controversial. In this paper I analyze one metacognitive experience, having a word at the tip of one’s tongue, and argue that this experience is an instance of cognitive phenomenology. I develop what I call a Cognitive view of tip-of-the-tongue (TOT) experience, supported by examining the prominent psychological explanation of tip-of-the-tongue states emerging from the science of language pr…Read more