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Judit Szalai

Eotvos Lorand University of Sciences
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    16
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  •  News and Updates
    6

 More details
  • Eotvos Lorand University of Sciences
    Regular Faculty
  • Eotvos Lorand University of Sciences
    Department of Philosophy
    Regular Faculty
Budapest, Budapest, Hungary
Areas of Specialization
Philosophy, Misc
Metaphysics and Epistemology
History of Western Philosophy
Philosophy of Action
Philosophy of Mind
17th/18th Century Philosophy
1 more
Areas of Interest
Philosophy, Misc
Metaphysics and Epistemology
History of Western Philosophy
Philosophy of Action
Philosophy of Mind
17th/18th Century Philosophy
1 more
  • All publications (16)
  •  77
    Introduction: Self-esteem and social esteem: Normative issues
    with Andreas Blank
    Human Affairs 30 (3): 297-301. 2020.
  • Manfred Walther Marcel Senn (ed.), Ethik, Recht, und Politik bei Spinoza. Zürich: Schultess (edited book)
    Schultess Verlag. 2011.
    Political TheoryBaruch Spinoza
  •  2652
    The potential use of artificial intelligence in the therapy of borderline personality disorder
    Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 27 (3): 491-496. 2021.
    This paper explores the possibility of AI-based addendum therapy for borderline personality disorder, its potential advantages and limitations. Identity disturbance in this condition is strongly connected to self-narratives, which manifest excessive incoherence, causal gaps, dysfunctional beliefs, and diminished self-attributions of agency. Different types of therapy aim at boosting self-knowledge through self-narratives in BPD. The suggestion of this paper is that human-to-human therapy could b…Read more
    This paper explores the possibility of AI-based addendum therapy for borderline personality disorder, its potential advantages and limitations. Identity disturbance in this condition is strongly connected to self-narratives, which manifest excessive incoherence, causal gaps, dysfunctional beliefs, and diminished self-attributions of agency. Different types of therapy aim at boosting self-knowledge through self-narratives in BPD. The suggestion of this paper is that human-to-human therapy could be complemented by AI assistance holding out the promise of making patients' self-narratives more coherent through improving the accuracy of their self-assessments, reflection on their emotions, and understanding their relationships with others. Theoretical and pragmatic arguments are presented in favour of this idea, and certain technical solutions are suggested to implement it.
    MedicineM&E, MiscOther Academic Areas, MiscPhilosophy, MiscellaneousPhilosophy of MindPhilosophy, Ge…Read more
    MedicineM&E, MiscOther Academic Areas, MiscPhilosophy, MiscellaneousPhilosophy of MindPhilosophy, General WorksPersonality Disorders
  •  748
    Reconstructivism not dead. Introduction
    with Oliver Toth
    Hungarian Review of Philosophy 65 (1): 5-8. 2022.
    Spinoza: Context, Misc
  •  993
    Sustaining the Higher-Level Principle of Equal Treatment in Autonomous Driving
    In Marco Norskov, Johanna Seibt & Oliver S. Quick (eds.), Culturally Sustainable Social Robotics: Proceedings of Robophilosophy 2020. 2020.
    This paper addresses the cultural sustainability of artificial intelligence use through one of its most widely discussed instances: autonomous driving. The introduction of self-driving cars places us in a radically novel moral situation, requiring advance, reflectively endorsed, forced, and iterable choices, with yet uncharted forms of risk imposition. The argument is meant to explore the necessity and possibility of maintaining one of our most fundamental moral-cultural principles in this new c…Read more
    This paper addresses the cultural sustainability of artificial intelligence use through one of its most widely discussed instances: autonomous driving. The introduction of self-driving cars places us in a radically novel moral situation, requiring advance, reflectively endorsed, forced, and iterable choices, with yet uncharted forms of risk imposition. The argument is meant to explore the necessity and possibility of maintaining one of our most fundamental moral-cultural principles in this new context, that of the equal treatment of persons. It is claimed that the implementation of this principle requires central and uniform regulation in autonomous mobility.
    Applied Ethics, MiscellaneousEthics and Society, Misc
  • The Problem of Justification in Spinoza's Political Liberalism
    In Manfred Walther Marcel Senn (ed.), Ethik, Recht, und Politik bei Spinoza. Zürich: Schultess, Schultess Verlag. 2011.
    Political Theory
  • The problem of justification in Spinoza's Political Liberalism
    In Manfred Walther Marcel Senn (ed.), Ethik, Recht, und Politik bei Spinoza, Schultess. pp. 189-194. 2001.
    Philosophy, MiscValue TheoryHistory of Western Philosophy
  •  1673
    Personal Identity and Self-Interpretation & Natural Right and Natural Emotions (edited book)
    with Gabor Boros and Oliver Toth
    Eötvös University Press. 2020.
    Collection of papers presented at the 2nd and 3rd Budapest Seminar in Early Modern Philosophy.
    Early Modern Scholasticism17th/18th Century British Philosophy, MiscRené DescartesImmanuel KantNicol…Read more
    Early Modern Scholasticism17th/18th Century British Philosophy, MiscRené DescartesImmanuel KantNicolas MalebrancheSelf-KnowledgeSamuel PufendorfDenis Diderot
  •  9
    Kortárs angolszász érzelemfilozófia
    L'Harmattan. 2013.
    Philosophy, Misc
  • Individuum, közösség és jog Spinoza filozófiájában (review)
    Studia Spinozana: An International and Interdisciplinary Series 16 312-314. 2008.
  •  51
    Foreword
    with Katalin Farkas
    European Journal of Analytic Philosophy 2 (1): 5-6. 2006.
    Media Ethics
  • The Problem of Justification in Spinoza's 'political liberalism'
    In Manfred Walther Marcel Senn (ed.), Ethik, Recht, und Politik bei Spinoza, Schultess. 2001.
  •  2200
    The Concept of Affectivity in Early Modern Philosophy (edited book)
    with Gábor Boros, Judit Szalai, and Oliver Toth
    Eötvös Loránd University Press. 2017.
    Collection of papers presented at the First Budapest Seminar in Early Modern Philosophy.
    17th/18th Century Philosophy, MiscSpinoza: AffectsTheories of Emotion
  •  333
    The Sense of Agency in OCD
    Review of Philosophy and Psychology 10 (2): 363-380. 2019.
    This paper proposes an integrated account of the etiology of OCD that accommodates both dysfunctional cognitions and sensorimotor features of compulsive action. It is argued that cognitive/metacognitive theories do not aspire to address all obsessive-compulsive phenomenal properties and that empirical evidence concerning some of these requires the incorporation of motor deficits as an independent factor in a plausible conception of OCD. The difference in agency attribution between obsessive-comp…Read more
    This paper proposes an integrated account of the etiology of OCD that accommodates both dysfunctional cognitions and sensorimotor features of compulsive action. It is argued that cognitive/metacognitive theories do not aspire to address all obsessive-compulsive phenomenal properties and that empirical evidence concerning some of these requires the incorporation of motor deficits as an independent factor in a plausible conception of OCD. The difference in agency attribution between obsessive-compulsive persons and schizophrenia patients with delusions of control is also accounted for in terms of bottom-up processes.
    Psychiatry and PsychotherapyCognitive Sciences, MiscPhilosophy, MiscellaneousThought and ThinkingAge…Read more
    Psychiatry and PsychotherapyCognitive Sciences, MiscPhilosophy, MiscellaneousThought and ThinkingAgencyThe SelfMental Actions
  •  172
    Agency and Mental States in Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
    Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 23 (1): 47-59. 2016.
    The dominant philosophical conceptions of obsessive-compulsive behavior present its subject as having a deficiency, usually characterized as volitional, due to which she lacks control and choice in acting. Compulsions (mental or physical) tend to be treated in isolation from the obsessive thoughts that give rise to them. I offer a different picture of compulsive action, one that is, I believe, more faithful to clinical reality. The clue to (most) obsessive-compulsive behavior seems to be the way…Read more
    The dominant philosophical conceptions of obsessive-compulsive behavior present its subject as having a deficiency, usually characterized as volitional, due to which she lacks control and choice in acting. Compulsions (mental or physical) tend to be treated in isolation from the obsessive thoughts that give rise to them. I offer a different picture of compulsive action, one that is, I believe, more faithful to clinical reality. The clue to (most) obsessive-compulsive behavior seems to be the way obsessive thoughts, which are grounded in an irrational cognitive style in matters of risk, danger, and responsibility, motivate compulsions through bizarre means–end reasoning. I show that the patient with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is not weak and passive with regard to the compulsive act; rather, the act is voluntary and regarded by the patient as an instrument of control. I also defend the idea that OCD-related cognitions are either beliefs or mental states with relevantly similar functional roles.
    PsychopathologyPhilosophy of Psychiatry
  •  85
    Emotional content, cognitive precondition and phenomenology
    European Journal of Analytic Philosophy 2 (1): 101-107. 2006.
    In his recent article “The Phenomenology and Intentionality of Emotions”, York Gunther offers views concerning the relations among feeling, emotional content, and attitude. Taken separately, most of these views, or the intuitions behind them, have considerable force. I contend, however, that the overarching argument does not go through: the correspondence between attitude and feeling on the one hand, and the intimacy of feeling and content on the other, do not secure that attitude and content co…Read more
    In his recent article “The Phenomenology and Intentionality of Emotions”, York Gunther offers views concerning the relations among feeling, emotional content, and attitude. Taken separately, most of these views, or the intuitions behind them, have considerable force. I contend, however, that the overarching argument does not go through: the correspondence between attitude and feeling on the one hand, and the intimacy of feeling and content on the other, do not secure that attitude and content connect in a similar way.
    Aspects of Consciousness
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