All Stories

  1. Consciousness, Theory, and Mental Appearance
  2. Methodological considerations for the study of mental qualities
  3. Will and the Theory of Judgment
  4. Mental Appearance and Mental Reality
  5. Armstrong and Perception
  6. Subjective inflation: phenomenology’s get-rich-quick scheme
  7. There’s Nothing about Mary
  8. Seeming to Seem
  9. Consciousness and confidence
  10. Misrepresentation and mental appearance
  11. The art of case teaching
  12. Quality Spaces, Relocation, and Grain
  13. Neural Antecedents of Spontaneous Voluntary Movement: A New Perspective
  14. Quality Spaces and Sensory Modalities
  15. Consciousness science: real progress and lingering misconceptions
  16. René Descartes’s Meditations on First Philosophy
  17. Quality-space theory in olfaction
  18. Higher-order awareness, misrepresentation and function
  19. The higher-order view does not require consciously self-directed introspection: response to Malach
  20. Empirical support for higher-order theories of conscious awareness
  21. Exaggerated reports: reply to Block
  22. HOW TO THINK ABOUT MENTAL QUALITIES
  23. Expressing One’s Mind
  24. Consciousness, the self and bodily location
  25. Higher‐Order Theories of Consciousness
  26. Concepts and Definitions of Consciousness
  27. Consciousness and its function
  28. Higher-order theories of consciousness
  29. Phenomenological overflow and cognitive access
  30. Sensory Quality and the Relocation Story
  31. The Independence of Consciousness and Sensory Quality
  32. Introspection and Self-Interpretation
  33. Unity of Consciousness and the Self
  34. Sensory Qualities, Consciousness, and Perception
  35. Two Concepts of Consciousness
  36. Content, Interpretation, and Consciousness
  37. Moore’s Paradox and Consciousness
  38. Consciousness and Its Expression
  39. Intentionality
  40. Introduction
  41. Thinking that One Thinks
  42. First-Person Operationalism and Mental Taxonomy
  43. Why Are Verbally Expressed Thoughts Conscious?
  44. V. CONSCIOUSNESS, INTERPRETATION, AND HIGHER-ORDER-THOUGHT
  45. 2. Varieties of higher-order theory
  46. Subjective Character and Reflexive Content
  47. Being Conscious of Ourselves
  48. XV-Unity of Consciousness and the Self
  49. Unity Of Consciousness And The Self
  50. How many kinds of consciousness?
  51. The Timing of Conscious States
  52. Moore's paradox and Crimmins's case
  53. Moore's paradox and Crimmins's case
  54. Color, Mental Location, and the Visual Field
  55. Consciousness and Metacognition
  56. Consciousness, Content, and Metacognitive Judgments
  57. Metacognition and Higher-Order Thoughts
  58. Introspection and Self-Interpretation
  59. Sensory Quality and the Relocation Story
  60. The Colors and Shapes of Visual Experiences
  61. Consciousness and Its Expression
  62. Two Concepts of Consciousness
  63. Apperception, Sensation, and Dissociability
  64. Apperception, Sensation, and Dissociability
  65. Phenomenal consciousness and what it's like
  66. Self-knowledge and Moore's paradox
  67. Moore's Paradox and Consciousness
  68. First-Person Operationalism and Mental Taxonomy
  69. State Consciousness and Transitive Consciousness
  70. Multiple Drafts and Higher-Order Thoughts
  71. Higher‐order thoughts and the appendage theory of consciousness
  72. The Independence of Consciousness and Sensory Quality
  73. Intentionality
  74. Postscript to ‘Intentionality’
  75. 17. Will and the Theory of Judgment
  76. Two concepts of consciousness
  77. Intentionality
  78. Perception: A Representative Theory.
  79. Perception: A Representative Theory by Frank Jackson
  80. Armstrong’s Causal Theory of Mind
  81. Keeping Matter in Mind
  82. Possibility, existence, and an ontological argument
  83. Mentality and Neutrality
  84. Res Cogitans: An Essay in Rational Psychology
  85. Talking about thinking
  86. Awareness and identification of self
  87. Metaphysics from A to Z
  88. Dualism
  89. Thinking That One Thinks