•  18
    Brains and Beliefs
    In David Michael Kaplan (ed.), Explanation and Integration in Mind and Brain Science, Oxford University Press. pp. 119-144. 2017.
    I suggest there are three ways to see the role of folk psychology in a mature cognitive neuroscience. First, integration says that folk psychology plays a decisive role in defining the objects of scientific inquiry and guiding that inquiry. Second, autonomy is the view that folk psychology deals in personal rather than subpersonal explanations and as such has aims that are incompatible with science. Third is eliminativism, which argues that folk psychology will be replaced by a scientific theory…Read more
  •  2
    In _ Psychiatry in the Scientific Image, _Dominic Murphy looks at psychiatry from the viewpoint of analytic philosophy of science, considering three issues: how we should conceive of, classify, and explain mental illness. If someone is said to have a mental illness, what about it is mental? What makes it an illness? How might we explain and classify it? A system of psychiatric classification settles these questions by distinguishing the mental illnesses and showing how they stand in relation to …Read more
  •  31
    Neuroscience and Psychopathologies
    In Benjamin D. Young & Carolyn Dicey Jennings (eds.), Mind, Cognition, and Neuroscience: A Philosophical Introduction, Routledge. 2021.
    Chapter Overview: This chapter looks at the foundations of modern psychiatry, with its stress on neurological malfunction, and asks about its strengths and limitations. We start by tracing some of the historical development of the ideas that have found their way into modern psychiatry from their roots in 19th-century medicine and neuroscience. Turning to the present day, we briefly look at competing conceptions of mental illness, before we discuss the philosophy of science that forms some of the…Read more
  •  23
    Sosa’s topic is the use of intuitions in philosophy. Much of what I have written on the issue has been critical of appeals to intuition in epistemology, though in recent years I have become increasingly skeptical of the use of intuitions in ethics and in semantic theory as well.
  •  1
    Madness and Modularity: Theoretical Issues in Psychiatric Nosology
    Dissertation, Rutgers the State University of New Jersey - New Brunswick. 1999.
    This dissertation examines the conceptual foundations of psychiatric taxonomy. The atheoretical approach of the current taxonomic orthodoxy is faulted, and a new foundation proposed. The basis of the proposed new approach to taxonomy is a view of the human mind which emerges from contemporary evolutionary approaches to the cognitive sciences. It is argued that a revised taxonomy should be based on a theoretical understanding of the ways in which an evolved mind can fail to function as expected. …Read more
  •  950
    Agency in Mental Illness and Cognitive Disability
    In Manuel Vargas & John Doris (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Moral Psychology, Oxford University Press. pp. 893-910. 2022.
    This chapter begins by sketching an account of morally responsible agency and the general conditions under which it may fail. We discuss how far individuals with psychiatric diagnoses may be exempt from morally responsible agency in the way that infants are, with examples drawn from a sample of diagnoses intended to make dierent issues salient. We further discuss a recent proposal that clinicians may hold patients responsible without blaming them for their acts. We also consider cognitively impa…Read more
  •  109
    What Is Psychiatry About?
    Philosophy Psychiatry and Psychology 30 (1): 41-43. 2023.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:What Is Psychiatry About?Dominic Murphy, PhD (bio)There are no such things as minds, but there are animate objects who behave differently from other types of natural entity. They move around under their own power, and some of their activity seems to be very different from that of other natural objects. Furthermore, some of our predictions about these objects are disproved in interesting ways; if we make a false prediction we do not r…Read more
  • Stich (edited book)
    Wiley‐Blackwell. 2009-03-20.
  •  32
    Introduction (review)
    In Dominic Murphy & Michael Bishop (eds.), Stich and His Critics, Wiley-blackwell. 2009.
    This chapter contains sections titled: References.
  •  74
    De Haan on Sense-Making and Psychopathology
    Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 27 (1): 29-30. 2020.
    De Haan has provided a novel and distinctly enactivist solution to the problem of integrating the physiological, experiential, social and existential. We admire her articulation of her fourth "existential" dimension. Not only does it represent a real attempt to bridge, as she says, enactivism's explanatory gap, it is also a potentially useful construct for conceptualizing the way that self-reflexivity seems to go astray in much psychopathology. We think that pinpointing this phenomenon is someth…Read more
  •  131
    Varieties of self-explanation
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 32 (2): 155-156. 2009.
    Carruthers is right to reject the idea of a dedicated piece of cognitive architecture with the exclusive job of reading our own minds. But his mistake is in trying to explain introspection in terms of any one mindreading system. We understand ourselves in many different ways via many systems
  •  170
    Folk psychology meets the frame problem
    Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 32 (3): 565-573. 2001.
  •  219
    The Concept of Mental Illness--Where the Debate has Reached and Where it Needs to Go
    Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 25 (1): 116-132. 2005.
    The paper develops a framework for discussing concepts of health and disease along two dimensions. The first is the role of values in our disease concepts, and the second is the relationship between science and folk psychology. This framework is then applied to the concept of mental disorder. I argue that existing treatments of the concept yield too much authority to common sense, which produces a tension within the program of finding a scientific basis for our ascriptions of mental disorder. Th…Read more
  •  104
    Dopamine and Discovery
    Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 18 (1): 69-71. 2011.
    Kendler and Schaffner have written an exemplary case study of the rise of the dopamine hypothesis and, if not its fall, at least its stagnation and transmutation. They bring out well both the state of the science and the opportunities offered by the theory to consider some famous philosophical theories of scientific progress. So well, in fact, have they done this, that I do not have a lot to say about it. I will just mention one or two points that I found interesting, and then say a little about…Read more