A sample of my publications.
Another Look at "A Logical Calculus" (with Mark Schlatter) (April 15, 2005 draft) (Word document)
Clark's Conditions on Extended Cognition are too Strong (April 15, 2005 draft). (Word document)
Clark Missed the Mark: Andy Clark on Intrinsic Content and Extended Cognition (with Fred Adams) (April 15, 2005 draft). (Word document)
The Biochemistry of Memory Consolidation: A Model System for the Philosophy of Mind (Forthcoming). Synthese.
Defending Non-Derived Content (with Fred Adams). (Forthcoming). Philosophical Psychology. (Word document)
Defending the Bounds of Cognition (with Fred Adams). (Forthcoming) In Menary, R., The Extended Mind, Aldershot, Hants: Ashgate Publishing Ltd. Submission invited by Richard Menary. It is anticipated that Andy Clark will reply to this paper in this collection. (Word document)
Challenges to Active Externalism (with Fred Adams) (Forthcoming). Invited contributed to the Cambridge Handbook on Situated Cognition. Edited by Philip Robbins and Murat Aydede. (April 15, 2005 Draft) (Word document)
Cognitive Architecture: The Structure of Cognitive Representations. Warfield, T., and Stich, S., Blackwell's Companion to the Mind. (2003). pp. 172-189.
The Systematicity Arguments. (2003). Kluwer Academic Publishers.
The Bounds of Cognition (2001) (with Fred Adams). Philosophical Psychology, 14, 43-64.
Connectionist Rules: A Rejoinder to Horgan and Tienson's Connectionism and the Philosophy of Psychology. Acta Analytica, 22, 59-85. (1999).
Rock Beats Scissors: Historicalism Fights Back. (with Fred Adams). Analysis, 57, 273-281. (1997)
Fodor's Asymmetric Causal Dependency Theory and Proximal Projections. (with Fred Adams) Southern Journal of Philosophy, 35, 433-437. (1997)
Explaining Systematicity. Mind and Language, 12, 115-136. (1997)
Exhibiting versus Explaining Systematicity: A Reply to Hadley and Hayward, Minds and Machines, 7, 39-55. (1997).
The Role of the Systematicity Argument in Classicism and Connectionism. In O'Nuallain, S. (Ed.). Two Sciences of Mind: Readings in Cognitive Science and Consciousness. Amsterdam, The Netherlands: John Benjamins. (pp. 197-218). (1997).
The Gap between Science and Social Policy in The Bell Curve. American Behavioral Scientist, 39, 84-97. A special issue on "The Bell Curve: Laying bare the resurgence of scientific racism," edited by Robert Newby. (1995).
Some Neural Network Theorizing Before McCulloch: Nicolas Rashevsky's Mathematical Biophysics. In Mira-Mira, J., (Ed.). Proceedings of the International Conference on Brain Processes, Theories, and Models. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. (pp. 64-70). (1995).
Representations without Rules, Connectionism, and the Syntactic Argument. Synthese, 101, 465-492. (1994).
Lloyd's Dialectical Theory of Reference. Mind & Language, 9, 1-24. (1994).
Fodorian Semantics. (with Fred Adams) In Warfield, T., & Stich, S. (Eds.). Mental Representation: A Reader. (1994). (pp. 223-242).
"X" means X: Fodor/Warfield Semantics. (with Fred Adams) Minds and Machines, 4, 215-231. (1994).
Fodorian Semantics, Pathologies, and Block's Problem. (with Fred Adams) Minds and Machines 3, 97-104. (1993).
Connectionism and Artificial Intelligence: History and Philosophical Interpretation. Journal for Experimental and Theoretical Artificial Intelligence, 4, 295-313. (1992).
'X' means X: Semantics Fodor-Style. (with Fred Adams) Minds and Machines, 2, 175-183. (1992).
Rules in Programming Languages and Networks. (with Fred Adams and Gary Fuller) In J. Dinsmore (Ed.). The Symbolic and Connectionist Paradigms: Closing the Gap. Hillsdale, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. (1992). (pp. 49-67).
Biology and Sufficiency in Connectionist Theory. In J. Dinsmore (Ed.) The Symbolic and Connectionist Paradigms: Closing the Gap. Hillsdale, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. (1992). (pp. 69-88).
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