Publications
Articles and book chapters
‘Does Property-Perception Entail the Content View?’. Erkenntnis, 89: 841–60, February 2024 (published online August 2022).
‘The Auditory Field: The Spatial Character of Auditory Experience’. Ergo 9 (40): 1,080–106, July 2023.
‘The Temporal Structure of Olfactory Experience’. In A. Keller & B. D. Young (eds.), Theoretical Perspectives on Smell, pp. 111–30, New York: Routledge, December 2022.
‘Windows on Time: Unlocking the Temporal Microstructure of Experience’. The Review of Philosophy and Psychology, 14: 1,197–218 (2023), May 2022.
‘Individuating the Senses of “Smell”: Orthonasal versus Retronasal Olfaction’. Synthese 199: 4,217–42, January 2021.
‘Are the Senses Silent? Travis’s Argument from Looks’. In J. Collins and T. Dobler (eds.), The Philosophy of Charles Travis: Language, Thought, and Perception, pp. 199–221, Oxford: Oxford University Press, July 2018.
‘The Senses’ (with Fiona Macpherson). In D. Prichard (ed.), Oxford Bibliographies in Philosophy, New York: Oxford University Press, May 2018.
‘Introduction: Perception Without Representation’ (with Roberta Locatelli). Topoi 36 (2): 197–212, March 2017.
‘Reid’s Direct Realism and Visible Figure’. The Philosophical Quarterly 63 (253): 783–803, September 2013.
‘Does Attention Exist?’. British Journal of Undergraduate Philosophy 2 (2): 153–68, July 2007.
Edited collections
Special Issue on Perception Without Representation (with R. Locatelli), Topoi 36 (2), June 2017.
Includes papers by Bill Brewer, Berit Brogaard, Jérôme Dokic & Jean-Rémy Martin, Naomi Eilan, Ivan V. Ivanov, J. A. Judge, M. G. F. Martin, Michael O’Sullivan, Charles Travis, plus our introduction, freely available via Open Access.
Popular philosophy
‘How Many Senses? Multisensory Perception Beyond the Five Senses’. Sabah Ülkesi 66: 76– 79, January 2021. (Published in Turkish)
‘Perception and Reality’, New Philosopher 1 (2): 104–7, November 2013.
‘Reflecting Upon Death’, Dialectic: The Journal of the York Philosophy Society, 2007.
Book reviews
Other
Contributor, Afterliff: The New Dictionary of Things There Should Be Words For, J. Lloyd & J. Canter (eds.), Faber & Faber.