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6Can a robot with artificial intelligence have free will?In Uri Maoz & Walter Sinnott-Armstrong (eds.), Free will: philosophers and neuroscientists in conversation, Oxford University Press. pp. 86-92. 2022.This chapter discusses the question of whether there could ever be artificial intelligence with free will. This question reduces to whether or not artificial intelligence will ever be able to act on domain-general rationally formed intentions. However, it might not be possible to distinguish between behavior that is produced by such intentions and behavior that is merely a simulation. This could be because, as the Chinese Room thought experiment seems to show, consciousness intuitively is a nece…Read more
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5Does free will come in degrees?In Uri Maoz & Walter Sinnott-Armstrong (eds.), Free will: philosophers and neuroscientists in conversation, Oxford University Press. pp. 57-62. 2022.The question of whether free will exists is often reduced to the binary question of whether or not its existence would be compatible with determinism. However, there are a number of important dimensions that permit different degrees of free will. Four components of free will seem to allow for a graded approach: (1) the ability to act in line with intentions (2) which are consciously formed (3) using one’s rational machinery and (4) without external interference. Finally, the chapter discusses wh…Read more
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23Does Accountability Require Agency? Comment on Responsibility and Accountability in the Algorithmic SocietyPhilosophy and Technology 39 (1): 13. 2026.In their intriguing paper Responsibility and Accountability in an Algorithmic Society (2025) the authors argue that the debate on how to deal with responsibility related issues with algorithmic agents requires a distinction between responsibility and accountability. In this comment to their paper, it is argued that while the notion of accountability as understood by the authors brings some significant benefits it also is ambiguous in an important way. Accountability could be understood as being …Read more
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6Managerial Control and Free Mental AgencyIn Andy Clark, Julian Kiverstein & Tillmann Vierkant (eds.), Decomposing the Will, Oxford University Press Usa. pp. 283-297. 2013.Recent developments in the literature on mental agency have suggested that there are two quite different forms of mental agency. So-called managerial control can be understood simply along the lines of bodily intentional action. Evaluative control, on the other hand, is specific of mental agency. According to the proponents of this distinction, evaluative control is the primary or essential form of mental agency. In this chapter, it is argued that managerial control is more important than is ass…Read more
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682Against AI welfare: Care practices should prioritize living beings over AIAI Magazine 46 (3): 1-6. 2025.In this Comment, we critique the growing “AI welfare” movement and propose a novel guideline, the Precarity Guideline, to determine care entitlement. In contrast to approaches that emphasize potential for suffering, the Precarity Guideline is grounded in empirically identifiable features. The severity of ongoing humanitarian crises, biodiversity loss, and climate change provides additional reasons to prioritize the needs of living beings over machine learning algorithms as candidates for care.
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292Find the Gap: AI, Responsible Agency and VulnerabilityMinds and Machines 34 (3): 1-23. 2024.The responsibility gap, commonly described as a core challenge for the effective governance of, and trust in, AI and autonomous systems (AI/AS), is traditionally associated with a failure of the epistemic and/or the control condition of moral responsibility: the ability to know what we are doing and exercise competent control over this doing. Yet these two conditions are a red herring when it comes to understanding the responsibility challenges presented by AI/AS, since evidence from the cogniti…Read more
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76Mindshaping and Non-Gricean Approaches to Language EvolutionReview of Philosophy and Psychology 15 (1): 131-148. 2024.Orthodoxy has it that language evolution requires Gricean communicative intentions and therefore an understanding of nested metarepresentations. The problem with this orthodoxy is that it is hard to see how non-linguistic creatures could have such a sophisticated understanding of mentality. Some philosophers like Bar-On (The Journal of Philosophy 110 (6): 293-330, 2013a; Mind and Language 28 (3): 342-375, 2013b) have attempted to develop a non-Gricean account of language acquisition building on …Read more
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92The Tinkering MindOxford University Press. 2022.Epistemic agency is a crucial concept in many different areas of philosophy and the cognitive sciences. It is crucial in dual process theories of cognition as well as theories of metacognition and mindreading, self-control, and moral agency. But what is epistemic agency? The Tinkering Mind argues that epistemic agency has two distinct and incompatible definitions. It can be simply understood as intentional mental action, or as a distinct non-voluntary form of evaluative agency. The core argument…Read more
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147Responsibility Without Freedom? Folk Judgements About Deliberate ActionsFrontiers in Psychology 10 (1133): 1--6. 2019.A long-standing position in philosophy, law, and theology is that a person can be held morally responsible for an action only if they had the freedom to choose and to act otherwise. Thus, many philosophers consider freedom to be a necessary condition for moral responsibility. However, empirical findings suggest that this assumption might not be in line with common sense thinking. For example, in a recent study we used surveys to show that – counter to positions held by many philosophers – lay pe…Read more
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120Owning Intentions and Moral ResponsibilityEthical Theory and Moral Practice 8 (5): 507-534. 2005.The article argues that there is a specific role for narrative consciousness in our understanding of justified responsibility ascription. Starting from a short review of empirical findings that suggest that we do not consciously control our actions, the article proceeds to spell out a concept of willed actions that does justice to the scientific results, conceptual requirements, and our most important intuitions on the ascription of responsibility. In order to do this, the article develops a con…Read more
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126Choice in a two systems world: picking & weighing or managing & metacognitionPhenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 17 (1): 1-13. 2018.Intuitively, choices seem to be intentional actions but it is difficult to see how they could be. If our choices are all about weighing up reasons then there seems no room for an additional intentional act of choice. Richard Holton has suggested a solution to this puzzle, which involves thinking of choices in a two systems of cognition framework. Holton’s suggestion does solve the puzzle, but has some unsatisfactory consequences. This paper wants to take over the important insights from Holton o…Read more
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30This book gives a convincing philosophical explanation for the strong persistence of our diverse folk psychological intuitions about the self. For this purpose it introduces, on the one hand, the distinction between subject and self model as proposed by Metzinger, on the other hand, the distinction between a social/normative and a cognitive/organic perspective on the self. The book argues that one needs to take into account both distinctions, if one wants to answer notoriously difficult question…Read more
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69Decomposing the Will (edited book)Oxford University Press USA. 2013.There is growing evidence from the science of human behavior that our everyday, folk understanding of ourselves as conscious, rational, responsible agents may be mistaken. The new essays in this volume display and explore this radical claim. folk concept of the responsible agent after abandoning the image of a central executive and "decomposing" the notion of the conscious will into multiple interlocking aspects and functions.
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159Zombie Mary and the blue banana. On the compatibility of the 'knowledge argument' with the argument from modalityPSYCHE: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Research On Consciousness 8. 2002.This paper is trying to show that it is not possible to use the Knowledge argument as independent evidence for the form of non-reductionism the Modal argument argues for. To show this, Jackson's famous 'Mary' thought experiment is imagined in a zombie world. This leads to the result that there are many problems in the Mary experiment, which cannot have anything to do with phenomenal Qualia, because the Zombie-Mary would encounter them as well, and once all these problems are accounted for, it is…Read more
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95Mindshaping and the intentional control of the mindIn Fabio Paglieri (ed.), Consciousness in Interaction: The role of the natural and social context in shaping consciousness, John Benjamins Publishing. 2012.Understanding and controlling our minds is one of the most fascinating features of human cognition. It has often been assumed that this ability requires a theoretical understanding of psychological states. This assumption has recently been put under pressure by so called mindshaping approaches. We agree that these approaches provide us with a new way of self-understanding and that they enable a very powerful form of self-regulation which we label narrative control. However, we insist that there …Read more
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249Is Willpower Just Another Way of Tying Oneself to the Mast?Review of Philosophy and Psychology 6 (4): 779-790. 2015.This paper argues against the intuition that willpower and so called ‘tying to the mast’ strategies are fundamentally different types of mental actions to achieve self control. The argument for this surprising claim is that at least on the most plausible account of willpower an act of willpower consists in an intentional mental action that disables the mental agent and thereby creates a mental tie. The paper then defends this claim against the objection that tying to the mast strategies do not h…Read more
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71Self knowledge and knowing other minds: The implicit / explicit distinction as a tool in understanding theory of mindBritish Journal of Developmental Psychology 30 (1): 141-155. 2012.Holding content explicitly requires a form of self knowledge. But what does the relevant self knowledge look like? Using theory of mind as an example, this paper argues that the correct answer to this question will have to take into account the crucial role of language based deliberation, but warns against the standard assumption that explicitness is necessary for ascribing awareness. It argues in line with Bayne that intentional action is at least an equally valid criterion for awareness. This …Read more
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126Explicit Reasons, Implicit Stereotypes and the Effortful Control of the MindEthical 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
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265How do you know that you settled a question?Philosophical Explorations 18 (2): 199-211. 2015.It is commonly assumed in the philosophical literature that in order to acquire an intention, the agent has to settle a question of what to do in practical deliberation. Carruthers, P. has recently used this to argue that the acquisition of intentions can never be conscious even in cases where the agent asserts having the intention in inner speech. Because of that Carruthers also believes that knowledge of intentions even in first person cases is observational. This paper explores the challenge …Read more
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160Mental Muscles and the Extended WillTopoi 33 (1): 1-9. 2014.In the wake of Clark and Chalmers famous argument for extended cognition some people have argued that willpower equally can extend into the environment (e.g. Heath and Anderson in The thief of time: philosophical essays on procrastination. Oxford University Press, New York, pp 233–252, 2010). In a recent paper Fabio Paglieri (Consciousness in interaction: the role of the natural and social context in shaping consciousness. John Benjamins, Amsterdam, pp 179–206, 2012) provides an interesting argu…Read more
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6New Views on Old Issues: The CNCC Essay Award for Junior ScholarsPSYCHE: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Research On Consciousness 15 (1). 2009.
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The role of the self-model for self-determinationIn Sabine Maasen & Barbara Sutter (eds.), On willing selves: neoliberal politics vis-à-vis the neuroscientific challenge, Plagrave Macmiilan. pp. 209. 2007.
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From voluntary to relational action : responsibility in questionIn Sabine Maasen & Barbara Sutter (eds.), On willing selves: neoliberal politics vis-à-vis the neuroscientific challenge, Plagrave Macmiilan. 2007.
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82What metarepresentation is forIn Michael J. Beran, Johannes Brandl, Josef Perner & Joëlle Proust (eds.), The foundations of metacognition, Oxford University Press. pp. 279. 2012.Humans seem special, because they are able to think about thinking (to make their mentality the object of their thoughts). In this paper I distinguish two very different ways in which thinking about thinking could be understood and which role these understandings play in the control of the mind. I argue on the one hand that language enables humans to express and attend to the content of their thoughts. This is an incredibly powerful tool which allows for the intentional manipulation of content. …Read more
Edinburgh, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Specialization
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| Mental Actions |
| Free Will and Neuroscience |
| Free Will and Psychology |
| Responsibility and Reactive Attitudes |
| Mindreading |
| Extended Cognition |