•  59
    Epistemic Warrants and Higher-Order Theories of Conscious Perception
    with James Edwards
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 343-364. 2016.
    We present a new account of perceptual consciousness, one which gives due weight to the epistemic commitment of normal perception in familiar circumstances. The account is given in terms of a higher-order attitude for which the subject has an immediate perceptual epistemic warrant in the form of an appropriate first-order perception. We develop our account in contrast to Rosenthal's higher-order account, rejecting his view of consciousness in virtue of so-called ‘targetless’ higher-order states.…Read more
  •  10
    The Philosophy of Emotion
    with David Platchias
    Acumen Publishing. 2014.
    What are emotions? What role do they play in our lives? Are emotions irrational responses or essential to theoretical and practical reasoning? Do they help us achieve goals? How do emotions feel? Because emotions occupy such a central place in our lives they have increasingly come under philosophical scrutiny. Today a complex body of thought exists on emotion, offering competing accounts of the interrelation between emotion, cognition, and feeling. The Philosophy of Emotion opens with a clear ov…Read more
  •  26
    Action, Intelligibility and Motivational Space
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 22 (3): 456-460. 2014.
    No abstract
  •  109
    The veil of perception and contextual relativism
    Sorites 15 (December): 76-86. 2004.
    In this paper I point out main shortfalls of the three main families of theories of perception and I propose a sort of inferential realism. In addition, I argue that there cannot be a scientific variant of direct realism and illustrate this point with reference to P.F.Strawson's attempt to reconcile, not naïve realism and the scientific variant as he amounts to, but rather, direct and indirect realism. I draw the distinction between four cases of illusion, and I refer to one of these, namely to …Read more
  •  3
    No abstract available.
  •  26
    Jaegwon Kim "Physicalism or Something Near Enough" (review)
    Journal of Consciousness Studies 12 (11). 2005.
  •  1
    No abstract available.
  •  96
    How can the fine-grained phenomenology of conscious experience arise from neural processes in the brain? How does a set of action potentials (nerve impulses) become like the feeling of pain in one's experience? Contemporary neuroscience is teaching us that our mental states correlate with neural processes in the brain. However, although we know that experience arises from a physical basis, we don't have a good explanation of why and how it so arises. The problem of how physical processes give ri…Read more
  •  146
    According to some representationalists (M. Tye, Ten problems of consciousness, MIT Press, Massachusetts, USA, 1995; W.G. Lycan, Consciousness and experience, MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA, 1996; F. Dretske, Naturalising the mind, MIT Press, Massachusetts, USA 1995), qualia are identical to external environmental states or features. When one perceives a red rose for instance, one is visually representing the actual redness of the rose. The represented redness of the rose is the actual …Read more
  •  354
    Experiencing a Hard Problem?
    Teorema: International Journal of Philosophy (3): 115-30. 2008.
  •  12
    This book explains the key concepts that surround the issue as well as the nature of the hard problem and the several approaches to it. It gives a comprehensive treatment of the phenomenon, incorporating its main metaphysical and epistemic aspects as well as recent empirical findings, such as the phenomena of blindsight, change blindness, visual-form agnosia and optic ataxia, mirror recognition in other primates, split-brain cases, and visual extinction.
  •  29
    Sport is Art
    European Journal of Sport Science 3 (4): 1-18. 2003.
  •  128