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296The Development of Modal CognitionIn Ana Arregui, Valentine Hacquard & Michela Ippolito (eds.), Cambridge Handbook of Natural Language Modality, Cambridge University Press. forthcoming.Recent years have seen a rapid growth of interest in the question of how our ability to think not only about what’s actual, but also about what’s possible, necessary, or impossible, develops. The field has been remarkably productive, generating a rapid accumulation of often conflicting results and theoretical proposals that can be difficult to keep track of. This chapter brings together empirical findings and current theoretical perspectives on modal development in a systematic and critical narr…Read more
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1291Generics and Quantified Generalizations: Asymmetry Effects and Strategic CommunicatorsCognition 256 (C): 106004. 2025.Generic statements (‘Tigers have stripes’) are pervasive and developmentally early-emerging modes of generalization with a distinctive linguistic profile. Previous experimental work suggests that generics display a unique asymmetry between the prevalence levels required to accept them and the prevalence levels typically implied by their use. This asymmetry effect is thought to have serious social consequences: if speakers use socially problematic generics based on prevalence levels that are syst…Read more
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1221Giving Generic Language Another ThoughtWIREs Cognitive Science 16. 2025.According to an influential research program in cognitive science, philosophy, and linguistics, there is a deep, special connection between generics and pernicious aspects of social cognition such as stereotyping. Specifically, generics are thought to exacerbate our propensity to essentialize, lead us to overgeneralize based on scarce evidence, and lead to other epistemically dubious patterns of inference. Recently, however, several studies have put empirical and theoretical pressure on some of …Read more
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1145How does pornography change desires? A pragmatic accountPhilosophical Quarterly 74 (4): 1228-1250. 2024.Rae Langton and Caroline West famously argue that pornography operates like a language game, in that it introduces certain views about women into the common ground via presupposition accommodation. While this pragmatic model explains how pornography has the potential to change its viewers’ beliefs, it leaves open how pornography changes people's desires. Our aim in this paper is to show how Langton and West's discourse-theoretic account of pornography can be refined to close this lacuna. Using t…Read more
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1594Engineering social concepts: Feasibility and causal modelsPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 109 (3): 819-837. 2024.How feasible are conceptual engineering projects of social concepts that aim for the engineered concept to be deployed in people's ordinary conceptual practices? Predominant frameworks on the psychology of concepts that shape work on stereotyping, bias, and machine learning have grim implications for the prospects of conceptual engineers: conceptual engineering efforts are ineffective in promoting certain social‐conceptual changes. Since conceptual components that give rise to problematic social…Read more
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1971Engineering Social Concepts: Labels and the Science of CategorizationIn Sally Haslanger, Karen Jones, Greg Restall, Francois Schroeter & Laura Schroeter (eds.), Mind, Language, and Social Hierarchy: Constructing a Shared Social World, Oxford University Press. forthcoming.One of the core insights from Eleanor Rosch’s work on categorization is that human categorization isn’t arbitrary. Instead, two psychological principles constrain possible systems of classification for all human cultures. According to these principles, the task of a category system is to provide maximum information with the least cognitive effort, and the perceived world provides us with structured rather than arbitrary features. In this paper, I show that Rosch’s insights contain important less…Read more
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1346Asymmetry Effects in Generic and Quantified GeneralizationsProceedings of the 45Th Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society 45 1-6. 2023.Generic statements (‘Tigers have stripes’) are pervasive and early-emerging modes of generalization with a distinctive linguistic profile. Previous experimental work found that generics display a unique asymmetry between their acceptance conditions and the implications that are typically drawn from them. This paper presents evidence against the hypothesis that only generics display an asymmetry. Correcting for limitations of previous designs, we found a generalized asymmetry effect across generi…Read more
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2930On SubtweetingIn Patrick Connolly, Sandy Goldberg & Jennifer Saul (eds.), Conversations Online: Explorations in Philosophy of Language, Oxford University Press. pp. 282-311. 2025.In paradigmatic cases of subtweeting, one Twitter user critically or mockingly tweets about another person without mentioning their username or their name. In this chapter, we give an account of the strategic aims of subtweeting and the mechanics through which it achieves them. We thereby hope to shed light on the distinctive communicative and moral texture of subtweeting while filling in a gap in the philosophical literature on strategic speech in social media. We first specify what subtweets a…Read more
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538Psychological Essentialism and the Structure of ConceptsPhilosophy Compass 17 (5). 2022.Psychological essentialism is the hypothesis that humans represent some categories as having an underlying essence that unifies members of a category and is causally responsible for their typical attributes and behaviors. Throughout the past several decades, psychological essentialism has emerged as an extremely active area of research in cognitive science. More recently, it has also attracted attention from philosophers, who put the empirical results to use in many different philosophical areas…Read more
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1650Against Teleological EssentialismCognitive Science 45 (4). 2021.In two recent papers, Rose and Nichols present evidence in favor of the view that humans represent category essences in terms of a telos, such as honey-making, and not in terms of scientific essences, such as bee DNA. In this paper, I challenge their interpretation of the evidence, and show that it is directly predicted by the main theory they seek to undermine. I argue that their results can be explained as instances of diagnostic reasoning about scientific essences.
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165Causal Structures in Language and ThoughtDissertation, University of Southern California. 2020.This dissertation defends the view that concepts encode causal information and, for the first time, applies this view to a range of topics in the philosophy of language and social philosophy. In my first chapter (“Cognitive Essentialism and the Structure of Concepts”), I survey the current empirical and theoretical literature on causal-essentialist theories of concepts. In my second chapter (“Meaning Externalism and Causal Model Theory”), I propose an account of natural kind concepts according t…Read more
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783Pornography and Dehumanization: The Essentialist DimensionAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 98 (4): 703-717. 2020.The objective of this paper is to show that pornography dehumanizes women through essentialization. First, I argue that certain acts of subject-essentialization are acts of subject-dehumanization. Second, I demonstrate, by reviewing evidence about the linguistic material that we find in and around pornography, that pornography systematically deploys content that essentializes women in the ways identified as problematic. It follows that pornography dehumanizes women.
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3809An Essentialist Theory of the Meaning of SlursPhilosophers' Imprint 19. 2019.In this paper, I develop an essentialist model of the semantics of slurs. I defend the view that slurs are a species of kind terms: Slur concepts encode mini-theories which represent an essence-like element that is causally connected to a set of negatively-valenced stereotypical features of a social group. The truth-conditional contribution of slur nouns can then be captured by the following schema: For a given slur S of a social group G and a person P, S is true of P iff P bears the “essence” o…Read more
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500Can we perceive mental states?Synthese 197 (5): 2245-2269. 2020.In this paper, I defend Non-Inferentialism about mental states, the view that we can perceive some mental states in a direct, non-inferential way. First, I discuss how the question of mental state perception is to be understood in light of recent debates in the philosophy of perception, and reconstruct Non-Inferentialism in a way that makes the question at hand—whether we can perceive mental states or not—scientifically tractable. Next, I motivate Non-Inferentialism by showing that under the ass…Read more
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116Intentional action processing results from automatic bottom-up attention: An EEG-investigation into the Social Relevance Hypothesis using hypnosisConsciousness and Cognition 42 101-112. 2016.Social stimuli grab our attention: we attend to them in an automatic and bottom-up manner, and ascribe them a higher degree of saliency compared to non-social stimuli. However, it has rarely been investigated how variations in attention affect the processing of social stimuli, although the answer could help us uncover details of social cognition processes such as action understanding. In the present study, we examined how changes to bottom-up attention affects neural EEG-responses associated wit…Read more
APA Eastern Division
Amherst, Massachusetts, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Philosophy of Language |
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Philosophy of Cognitive Science |
| Social Philosophy |