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19Duddington and Our Awareness of Others’ MindsProceedings of the Aristotelian Society 126 (1): 1-20. 2026.What enables me to know that others exist? Nathalie Duddington offers two distinctive, and underexplored, insights into the question. She focuses on our capacity to perceive minds in perceiving animate beings, and on the ways in which we stand to be affected by others in knowing them. I will suggest a way of understanding what it is to see minds in action. I will also argue that ways we stand to be affected by others offers a resource for knowing others that takes us beyond perception, and is on…Read more
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662Self MattersErgo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 9 (n/a). 2022.We argue that relating to myself as me provides, as such, a reason to care about myself: grasping that an event involves me, instead of another, makes it matter in a special way. Further, this self-concern is not simply a matter of seeing in myself some instrumental value for other ends. We use as our foil a recent skeptical challenge to this view offered in Setiya (2015). We think the case against self-concern is powered by unwarrantedly narrow construals of three key notions. One is the notion…Read more
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2Mental actions and the no-content problemIn Lucy O'Brien & Matthew Soteriou (eds.), Mental actions, Oxford University Press. 2009.
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467Self-knowledge, agency, and forcePhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 71 (3). 2005.My aim in this paper is to articulate further what may be called an agency theory of self-knowledge. Many theorists have stressed how important agency is to self- knowledge, and much work has been done drawing connections between the two notions.<sup>2</sup> However, it has not always been clear what _epistemic_ advantage agency gives us in this area and why it does so. I take it as a constraint on an adequate account of how a subject knows her own mental states and acts, that it construe the kn…Read more
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182In this paper I want to propose that we see solipsism as arising from certain problems we have about identifying ourselves as subjects in an objective world. The discussion will centre on Wittgenstein’s treatment of solipsism in his Tractatus Logico- Philosophicus. In that work Wittgenstein can be seen to express an unusually profound understanding of the problems faced in trying to give an account of how we, who are subjects, identify ourselves as objects in the world. We have in his compressed…Read more
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450Moran on agency and self-knowledgeEuropean Journal of Philosophy 11 (3): 391-401. 2003.Critical notice
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112Getting Out of Your Head: Addiction and the Motive of Self‐EscapeMind and Language 31 (3): 314-334. 2016.This article explores and defends the claim that addictive desires—for alcohol in particular—are partly explained by the motive of self-escape. We consider how this claim sits with the neurophysiological explanation of the strength of addictive desires in terms of the effect addictive substances have on the dopamine system. We argue that nothing in the neuroscientific framework rules out pluralism about the causes of addictive desire.
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451Solipsism and self-referenceEuropean Journal of Philosophy 4 (2): 175-194. 1996.In this paper I want to propose that we see solipsism as arising from certain problems we have about identifying ourselves as subjects in an objective world. The discussion will centre on Wittgenstein
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293Ambulo Ergo SumRoyal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 76 57-75. 2015.It is an extraordinary thing that Descartes' famous Cogito argument is still being puzzled over; this paper is another fragment in an untiring tradition of puzzlement. The paper will argue that, if I were to ask the question the Cogito could provide for a positive answer. In particular, my aim in this is to argue, in opposition to recent discussion by John Campbell, that there is a way of construing conscious thinking on which the Cogito can be seen to provide a non-question begging argument for…Read more
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376Mental actions (edited book)Oxford University Press. 2009.The twelve specially written essays in this volume investigate the neglected topic of mental action, and show its importance for the metaphysics, epistemology, and phenomenology of mind. The essays investigate what mental actions are, how we are aware of them, and what is the relationship between mental and physical action
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23Review of The Bounds of Agency: An Essay in Revisionary Metaphysics, by Rovane, C (review)European Journal of Philosophy 8 (2): 230-235. 2000.
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209Evans on self-identificationNoûs 29 (2): 232-247. 1995.This paper argues that Gareth Evans' treatment of first person reference based on the myriad ways we have of receiving information about our bodies and location, cannot secure the guaranteed reference exhibited by first person reference. It faces a problem both when a subject fails to receive such information about herself, and when she receives misinformation.