• Visual adaptation and the purpose of perception
    Ian Phillips and Chaz Firestone
    Analysis 83 (3): 555-575. 2023.
    What is the purpose of perception? And how might the answer to this question help distinguish perception from other mental processes? Block’s landmark book, The.
  • Mental Structures
    Noûs (3): 649-677. 2020.
    An ongoing philosophical discussion concerns how various types of mental states fall within broad representational genera—for example, whether perceptual states are “iconic” or “sentential,” “analog” or “digital,” and so on. Here, I examine the grounds for making much more specific claims about how mental states are structured from constituent parts. For example, the state I am in when I perceive the shape of a mountain ridge may have as constituent parts my representations of the shapes of each…Read more
  • The Perspectival Character of Perception
    Journal of Philosophy 115 (4): 187-214. 2018.
    You can perceive things, in many respects, as they really are. For example, you can correctly see a coin as circular from most angles. Nonetheless, your perception of the world is perspectival. The coin looks different when slanted than when head-on, and there is some respect in which the slanted coin looks similar to a head-on ellipse. Many hold that perception is perspectival because you perceive certain properties that correspond to the “looks” of things. I argue that this view is misguided. …Read more
  • The outlier paradox: The role of iterative ensemble coding in discounting outliers
    Michael Epstein, Jake Quilty-Dunn, Eric Mandelbaum, and Tatiana Emmanouil
    Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance 1. forthcoming.
    Ensemble perception—the encoding of objects by their group properties—is known to be resistant to outlier noise. However, this resistance is somewhat paradoxical: how can the visual system determine which stimuli are outliers without already having derived statistical properties of the ensemble? A simple solution would be that ensemble perception is not a simple, one-step process; instead, outliers are detected through iterative computations that identify items with high deviance from the mean a…Read more
  • Fodor on cognition, modularity, and adaptationism
    Samir Okasha
    Philosophy of Science 70 (1): 68-88. 2003.
    This paper critically examines Jerry Fodor's latest attacks on evolutionary psychology. Contra Leda Cosmides and John Tooby, Fodor argues (i) there is no reason to think that human cognition is a Darwinian adaptation in the first place, and (ii) there is no valid inference from adaptationism about the mind to massive modularity. However, Fodor maintains (iii) that there is a valid inference in the converse direction, from modularity to adaptationism, but (iv) that the language module is an excep…Read more