• Medium independence and cognitive ontology
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences. forthcoming.
    This commentary on Haueis and Colaço's 'Metabolic considerations for cognitive modeling' emphasizes the importance of how we individuate cognitive capacities, operations, and vehicles. It challenges the target article’s reliance on mechanistic notions of computation and medium-independence, and uses examples from the memory literature to suggest that the role played by metabolic considerations in cognitive models will depend on questions of taxonomy and cognitive ontology.
  • Defending the medium‐independence of computation
    Mind and Language 40 (4): 458-467. 2025.
    The computational properties of a system are generally thought to be independent in some sense from its physical properties, in virtue of the fact that computation is a formally characterized concept. Several philosophers have recently challenged the idea that such “medium‐independence” is an essential feature of computation by arguing that some kinds of computation lack medium‐independence. This paper explores and rejects three such arguments in an attempt to defend the essential medium‐indepen…Read more
  • Clark (_Philosophical Psychology_ 19(3):291–307, 2006) proposes that a standard challenge to the hypothesis of extended cognition can be avoided in the case of linguistically structured cognition, because the role played by our public manipulation of linguistic artifacts is irreducible to the role played by the brain’s operations over internal representations. I demonstrate that Clark’s argument relies on a view of the brain’s cognitive architecture to which he no longer subscribes. I argue that…Read more
  • The Personal/Subpersonal Distinction
    Philosophy Compass 9 (5): 338-346. 2014.
    Daniel Dennett's distinction between personal and subpersonal explanations was fundamental in establishing the philosophical foundations of cognitive science. Since it was first introduced in 1969, the personal/subpersonal distinction has been adapted to fit different approaches to the mind. In one example of this, the ‘Pittsburgh school’ of philosophers attempted to map Dennett's distinction onto their own distinction between the ‘space of reasons’ and the ‘space of causes’. A second example ca…Read more