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Joanna Komorowska-Mach

University of Warsaw
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    11
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    10

 More details
  • University of Warsaw
    Institute of Philosophy
    Assistant Professor
Areas of Specialization
Self-Knowledge
Areas of Interest
Metaphilosophy
Metaepistemology
Visual Imagery and Imagination
Philosophy of Psychiatry and Psychopathology
The Problem of Other Minds
Self-Knowledge
Emotions
Pain
Belief
Philosophy of Consciousness
Philosophy of Mind
Theories of Imagination
7 more
  • All publications (11)
  •  46
    Beyond the participant-researcher division: co-creating ethical relationships through care and rapport in studies of post-laryngectomy communication
    with Adrianna Wojdat and Konrad Zieliński
    Diametros 21 (80): 23-37. 2024.
    This article presents the ethical implications for social science research emerging from our study on interpersonal communication after a laryngectomy. By tracing the evolution of our approach through specific research experiences and participant feedback, we provide empirical support for a flexible, multidimensional, and relational understanding of key ethical concepts, such as vulnerability and the researcher-participant relationship. Our approach has shifted from institutionally imposed rigid…Read more
    This article presents the ethical implications for social science research emerging from our study on interpersonal communication after a laryngectomy. By tracing the evolution of our approach through specific research experiences and participant feedback, we provide empirical support for a flexible, multidimensional, and relational understanding of key ethical concepts, such as vulnerability and the researcher-participant relationship. Our approach has shifted from institutionally imposed rigid categorizations and somewhat stereotypical treatment of both the research group and the researcher-participant relationship to an emphasis on building relationships founded on mutual care and rapport. We argue that this revised perspective fosters ethical collaboration that is beneficial and secure for all parties involved, and we offer practical examples of its implementation in research practice.
  •  82
    Why Not Escape? On the Hosiotes in Plato’s Crito
    Peitho 2 (1): 169-182. 2011.
    While the article discusses the factors that motivated Socrates’ decisionin the Crito, it emphasizes the possible cultural import of the choiceundertaken in the aftermath of the political upheavals in the late fifthcentury. It is also argued here that as Plato’s dialogue were written inthe period that followed the renewal of the Athenian politeia, it shouldbe perceived as having its roots both in the historical reality of its narrativefocus and in the then reality of Plato’s Athens.
  •  124
    First-Person Authority Through the Lens of Experimental Philosophy
    with Andrzej Szczepura
    Filozofia Nauki 29 (2): 209-227. 2021.
    Science, Logic, and MathematicsColor ExperienceExperimental Philosophy of MindExperimental Philosoph…Read more
    Science, Logic, and MathematicsColor ExperienceExperimental Philosophy of MindExperimental Philosophy: Epistemology, Misc
  •  73
    THEOPHRASTUS’ DISCUSSION OF WINDS - (R.) Mayhew (ed., trans.) Theophrastus of Eresus: On Winds. (Philosophia Antiqua 147.) Pp. x + 374. Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2018. Cased, €165, US$190. ISBN: 978-90-04-35182-0 (review)
    The Classical Review 69 (2): 408-409. 2019.
    Theophrastus
  •  52
    Introspection — One or More? Pluralism about Self-Knowledge
    Filozofia Nauki 27 (1): 5-25. 2019.
    Science, Logic, and Mathematics
  • Where do Concepts Come From?
    Filozofia Nauki 19 (4): 139. 2011.
    Science, Logic, and MathematicsPhilosophy of Psychology
  •  69
    Negatywny program filozofii eksperymentalnej a odwołania do intuicji w argumentacji filozoficznej
    Filozofia Nauki 21 (3 (83)): 157-165. 2013.
    Science, Logic, and MathematicsCritiques of Experimental Philosophy
  • Emergencja – podręcznik dla mało opornych
    Filozofia Nauki 18 (4). 2010.
    The review tries to summarize the main topics covered by the book "Między redukcją a emergencją" by Robert Poczobut and also to highlight certain points that might be controversial to the philosophically-oriented reader. In particular, Poczobut's methodological claims regarding the boundary between natural sciences and philosophy of mind are brought under scrutiny. While the book presents a broad range of views on matters regarding emergence and reduction, especially with respect to the psychoph…Read more
    The review tries to summarize the main topics covered by the book "Między redukcją a emergencją" by Robert Poczobut and also to highlight certain points that might be controversial to the philosophically-oriented reader. In particular, Poczobut's methodological claims regarding the boundary between natural sciences and philosophy of mind are brought under scrutiny. While the book presents a broad range of views on matters regarding emergence and reduction, especially with respect to the psychophysical problem, it remains to be proven that the views presented by the author are in reality the most viable option that a philosopher of mind wishing to conform to scientific results has at her disposal
  • O pochodzeniu pojęć
    Filozofia Nauki 19 (4). 2011.
    The review discusses the book The Origin of Concepts by Susan Carey, in which she presents three main theses — the innateness of some kind of conceptual representations, the presence of a qualitative change during conceptual development and the existence of a special learning mechanism that achieves that discontinuity called bootstrapping. The general reception of the work is positive. Minor doubts are presented regarding two claims: first, the speculation about the iconic format of core cogniti…Read more
    The review discusses the book The Origin of Concepts by Susan Carey, in which she presents three main theses — the innateness of some kind of conceptual representations, the presence of a qualitative change during conceptual development and the existence of a special learning mechanism that achieves that discontinuity called bootstrapping. The general reception of the work is positive. Minor doubts are presented regarding two claims: first, the speculation about the iconic format of core cognition representations, which seems to be underdeveloped and slightly unclear, second, the claim that core cognition representations are innate, which seems to be insufficiently supported by empirical data presented
    Innate Concepts
  • Self-Ascribing Emotions - Expressing or Detecting? Detectivist Components in Neo-expressivism
    Filozofia Nauki 23 (4): 41-54. 2015.
    Expression-Based Accounts of Self-KnowledgeScience, Logic, and Mathematics
  • Negative Program of Experimental Philosophy and Appealing to Intuition in Philosophical Argumentation
    Filozofia Nauki 21 (3). 2013.
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