•  271
    "The 'Causes' of the Hard Problem"
    Neuroquantology 16 (9): 46-49. 2019.
    This note calls attention to the fact that efficient causes – the sort of cause that changes something or makes something happen – can play no constitutive role in the immediate, cognitively conscious relation between cognitive subject and a cognit-ive object. It notes that: (1) it is a necessary condition for an efficient causal relation that it alter its relata; and (2) it is a necessary condition for a conscious cognitive relat-ion that it does not alter its relata. This has important implica…Read more
  •  39
    Letters to the Editor
    with James R. Otteson, Christopher Robin DeFusco, Arthur H. Prince, Elmer Sprague, and John Davenport
    Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 73 (2). 1999.
  • Foundations and Aporiai: The Intellectual Realism of Bernard Lonergan
    Dissertation, University of Kansas UMI DISS.SERVICE. ANN ARBPR. 1996.
    This is a exposition and critique of the "critical realism" of Bernard Lonergan. According to Lonergan the real or being is what is or could be known by inquiring intelligently and reasonably into experience, and these operations of insight are said to be both epistemologically and ontologically foundational. I introduce a "spare version" which states the theory in terms of intellectual curiosity alone. It is argued that Lonergan's theory of scientific explanation and description is incoherent b…Read more
  •  213
    Lonergan and perceptual direct realism: Facing up to the problem of the external material world
    International Philosophical Quarterly 47 (2): 203-220. 2007.
    In this paper I call attention to the fact that Lonergan gives two radically opposed accounts of how sense perception relates us to the external world and of how we know that this relation exists. I argue that the position that Lonergan characteristically adopts is not the one implied by what is most fundamental in his theory of cognition. I describe the initial epistemic position with regard to the problem of skepticism about the external material world that is in fact implied by his theory of …Read more
  •  194
    Lonergan and Perceptual Direct Realism: Facing Up to the Problem of the External Material World
    International Philosophical Quarterly 47 (2): 203-220. 2007.
    In this paper I call attention to the fact that Lonergan gives two radically opposed accounts of how sense perception relates us to the external world and of how we know that this relation exists. I argue that the position that Lonergan characteristically adopts is not the one implied by what is most fundamental in his theory of cognition. I describe the initial epistemic position with regard to the problem of skepticism about the external material world that is in fact implied by his theory of …Read more
  •  381
    In this paper I argue that Bonjour’s claim that empirical beliefs can only be justified by other empirical beliefs and his use of non-normative “spontaneous empirical beliefs” and the “The Doxastic Preumption” fail to solve the problems of coherence theory. I propose a justification of empirical (and other beliefs) based on the work of B. Lonergan.
  •  418
    David Chalmers argues that consciousness -- authentic, first-person, conscious consciousness -- cannot be reduced to brain events or to any physical event, and that efforts to find a workable mind-body identity theory are, therefore, doomed in principle. But for Chalmers and non-reductionist in general consciousness consists exclusively, or at least paradigmatically, of phenomenal or qualia-consciousness. This results in a seriously inadequate understanding both of consciousness and of the “hard…Read more
  •  466
    Bernard Lonergan has argued for a theory of cognition that is transcendentally secure, that is, one such that any plausible attempt to refute it must presuppose its correctness, and one that also grounds a correct metaphysics and ontology. His proposal combines an identity theory of knowledge with an intentional relation between knower and known. It depends in a crucial way upon an appropriation of one’s own cognitional motives and acts, that is, upon “knowing one’s own knowing.” I argue that be…Read more