•  47
    Storytelling agents: why narrative rather than mental time travel is fundamental
    Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 17 (3): 535-554. 2018.
    I propose that we can explain the contribution of mental time travel to agency through understanding it as a specific instance of our more general capacity for narrative understanding. Narrative understanding involves the experience of a pre-reflective and embodied sense of self, which co-emerges with our emotional involvement with a sequence of events. Narrative understanding of a sequence of events also requires a ‘recombinable system’, that is, the ability to combine parts to make myriad sequ…Read more
  •  72
    Explicit Reasons, Implicit Stereotypes and the Effortful Control of the Mind
    Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 18 (2): 251-265. 2015.
    Research in psychology clearly shows that implicit biases contribute significantly to our behaviour. What is less clear, however, is whether we are responsible for our implicit biases in the same way that we are responsible for our explicit beliefs. Neil Levy has argued recently that explicit beliefs are special with regard to the responsibility we have for them, because they unify the agent. In this paper we point out multiple ways in which implicit biases also unify the agent. We then examine …Read more