• Information theory
    In Mohan Matthen (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the Philosophy of Perception, Oxford University Press Uk. 2015.
  •  115
    Borgesian maps
    Analytic Philosophy 63 (2): 90-98. 2020.
    Analytic Philosophy, Volume 63, Issue 2, Page 90-98, June 2022.
  •  35
    Presence and Real Likenesses
    Analysis 81 (3): 586-594. 2021.
  •  35
    Depicting Properties’ Properties
    Journal of the American Philosophical Association 7 (3): 312-328. 2021.
    Little has been said about whether pictures can depict properties of properties. This article argues that they do. As a result, resemblance theories of depiction must be changed to accommodate this phenomenon. In addition, diagrams and maps are standardly understood to represent properties of properties, so this article brings accounts of depiction closer to accounts of diagrams than they had been before. Finally, the article suggests that recent work on perceptual content gives us reason to bel…Read more
  •  32
    John Kulvicki explores the many ways in which pictures can be meaningful, taking inspiration from the philosophy of language. Pictures are important parts of communicative acts. They express a variety of thoughts, and they are also representations. Kulvicki shows how the meanings of pictures let us put them to a wide range of communicative uses.
  •  41
    Art made for pictures
    Phenomenology and Mind 14 120-134. 2018.
    Over the last fifteen years, communication has become pictorial in a manner that it never was before. Billions of people have smart phones that enable them to take, edit, and share pictures easily whenever they choose to do so. This has created expressive niches within which new activities, with their own norms, continue to develop. Ready availability of these pictorial modes of communication, we claim, not only constitutes a change in the range of our communicative practices, but also changes t…Read more
  •  26
    Michael Newall: What is a picture? (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2012. 2012.
  •  1
  • Depiction
    In Michael Kelly (ed.), Oxford Encyclopedia of Aesthetics, second edition, Oxford University Press. 2014.
  • Twofoldness and visual awareness
    In Klaus Sachs-Hombach & Rainer Totzke (eds.), Bilder - Sehen - Denken, Herbert Von Halem Verlang. pp. 66-92. 2011.
  • Visual arts
    In Anna Ribeiro (ed.), Continuum Companion to Aesthetics. pp. 171-183. 2012.
  • Sound stimulants: defending the stable disposition view
    In Dustin Stokes, Stephen Biggs & Mohan Matthen (eds.), Perception and Its Modalities. pp. 205-221. 2015.
  •  151
    On Images: Their Structure and Content
    Oxford University Press UK. 2006.
    What makes pictures different from all of the other ways we have of representing things? Why do pictures seem so immediate? What makes a picture realistic or not? Against prevailing wisdom, Kulvicki claims that what makes pictures special is not how we perceive them, but how they relate to one another. This not only provides some new answers to old questions, but it shows that there are many more kinds of pictures out there than many have thought.
  •  252
    The central claim of this paper is that what it is like to see green or any other perceptible property is just the perceptual mode of presentation of that property. Perceptual modes of presentation are important because they help resolve a tension in current work on consciousness. Philosophers are pulled by three mutually inconsistent theses: representational externalism, representationalism, and phenomenal internalism. I throw my hat in with defenders of the first two: the externalist represent…Read more
  •  16
    Pictorial Diversity
    In Catharine Abell Katerina Bantinaki (ed.), Philosophical Perspectives on Depiction, Oxford University Press. pp. 25. 2010.
  •  15
    Introspective Availability
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 80 (1): 208-228. 2010.
  •  33
    Sight and Sensibility (review)
    Dialogue 46 (2): 412-414. 2007.
  •  97
    Maps, Pictures, and Predication
    Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 2. 2015.
  •  41
    Heavenly Sight and the Nature of Seeing-In
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 67 (4): 387-397. 2009.
  •  191
    Pictorial representation
    Philosophy Compass 1 (6). 2006.
    Maps, notes, descriptions, diagrams, flowcharts, photographs, paintings, and prints, all, in one way or another, manage to be about things or stand for them. This article looks at three ways in which philosophers have explained the way that pictures represent the world. It starts by describing some leading perceptual accounts and then surveys contemporary content and structural alternatives.
  •  112
    Isomorphism in information-carrying systems
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 85 (4): 380-395. 2004.
    For the information theorist, the lawful generalizations that subsume instantiations of properties in the environment and instantiations of properties of perceptual representations determine the latter's content. Perceptual representations are also commonly thought to be isomorphic to what they represent, which presents the information theorist with a puzzle. What role could isomorphism play in perceptual representation when lawful generalizations determine content? I show that in order for the …Read more
  • Artifact Expression
    In K. Stock & K. Thomson-Jones (eds.), New Waves in Aesthetics, Palgrave. 2008.
  •  174
    The nature of noise
    Philosophers' Imprint 8 1-16. 2008.
    There is a growing consensus in the philosophical literature that sounds differ rather profoundly from colors. Colors are qualities, while sounds are particulars of some sort or other, such as events or pressure waves. A key motivation for this is that sounds seem to be transient, to evolve over time, to begin and end, while colors seem like stable qualities of objects' surfaces. I argue that sounds are indeed, like colors, stable qualities of objects. Sounds are not transient, and they do not s…Read more
  •  156
    Our perceptual systems make information about the world available to our cognitive faculties. We come to think about the colors and shapes of objects because we are built somehow to register the instantiation of these properties around us. Just how we register the presence of properties and come to think about them is one of the central problems with understanding perceptual cognition. Another problem in the philosophy of perception concerns the nature of the properties whose presence we registe…Read more