University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Department of Philosophy
PhD
St. Louis, Missouri, United States of America
  •  144
    Affect and Sensation: Plato’s Embodied Cognition
    Phronesis 63 (2): 117-147. 2018.
    I argue that Plato, in theTimaeus, draws deep theoretical distinctions between sensation and affect, which comprises pleasure, pain, desire and emotion. Sensation (but not affect) is both ‘fine-grained’ (having orderly causal connections with its fundamental explanatory items) and ‘immediate’ (being provoked absent any mediating psychological state). Emotions, by contrast, are mediated and coarse-grained. Pleasure and pain are coarse-grained but, in a range of important cases, immediate. TheThea…Read more
  •  205
    Aristotle's Cognitive Science: Belief, Affect and Rationality
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 89 (2): 394-435. 2013.
    I offer a novel interpretation of Aristotle's psychology and notion of rationality, which draws the line between animal and specifically human cognition. Aristotle distinguishes belief (doxa), a form of rational cognition, from imagining (phantasia), which is shared with non-rational animals. We are, he says, “immediately affected” by beliefs, but respond to imagining “as if we were looking at a picture.” Aristotle's argument has been misunderstood; my interpretation explains and motivates it. R…Read more