journal
Journals Review of Philosophy and Psych...

Review of Philosophy and Psychology

https://read.qxmd.com/read/38497034/subjectivity-and-non-objectifying-awareness
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Donnchadh O'Conaill
We are each aware of our own experiences as they occur, but in this inner awareness our experiences do not seem to be presented to us as objects in the way that they typically are when we reflect on them. A number of philosophers, principally in the phenomenological tradition, have characterised this in terms of inner awareness being a non-objectifying mode of awareness. This claim has faced persistent objections that the notion of non-objectifying awareness is obscure or merely negatively characterised. In this paper I shall outline a positive conception of a non-objectifying mode of awareness, feature-encountering awareness...
2024: Review of Philosophy and Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37360913/vice-explanations-for-conspiracism-fundamentalism-and-extremism
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rik Peels
In the literature on conspiracism, fundamentalism, and extremism, we find so-called vice explanations for the extreme behavior and extreme beliefs that they involve. These are explanations in terms of people's character traits, like arrogance, vengefulness, closed-mindedness, and dogmatism. However, such vice explanations face the so-called situationist challenge, which argues based on various experiments that either there are no vices or that they are not robust. Behavior and belief, so is the idea, are much better explained by appeal to numerous situational factors, like one's mood or how orderly one's environment is...
May 30, 2023: Review of Philosophy and Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36968025/what-s-inside-is-all-that-counts-the-contours-of-everyday-thinking-about-self-control
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Juan Pablo Bermúdez, Samuel Murray, Louis Chartrand, Sergio Barbosa
UNLABELLED: Does self-control require willpower? The question cuts to the heart of a debate about whether self-control is identical with some psychological process internal to the agents or not. Noticeably absent from these debates is systematic evidence about the folk-psychological category of self-control. Here, we present the results of two behavioral studies ( N  = 296) that indicate the structure of everyday use of the concept. In Study 1, participants rated the degree to which different strategies to respond to motivational conflict exemplify self-control...
2023: Review of Philosophy and Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36968024/implicit-metaethical-intuitions-validating-and-employing-a-new-iat-procedure
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Johannes M J Wagner, Thomas Pölzler, Jennifer C Wright
Philosophical arguments often assume that the folk tends towards moral objectivism. Although recent psychological studies have indicated that lay persons' attitudes to morality are best characterized in terms of non-objectivism-leaning pluralism, it has been maintained that the folk may be committed to moral objectivism implicitly . Since the studies conducted so far almost exclusively assessed subjects' metaethical attitudes via explicit cognitions, the strength of this rebuttal remains unclear. The current study attempts to test the folk's implicit metaethical commitments...
2023: Review of Philosophy and Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36060095/deconstructing-the-conspiratorial-mind-the-computational-logic-behind-conspiracy-theories
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Francesco Rigoli
In the social sciences, research on conspiracy theories is accumulating fast. To contribute to this research, here I introduce a computational model about the psychological processes underlying support for conspiracy theories. The proposal is that endorsement of these theories depends on three factors: prior beliefs, novel evidence, and expected consequences. Thanks to the latter, a conspiracy hypothesis might be selected because it is the costliest to reject even if it is not the best supported by evidence and by prior beliefs (i...
August 27, 2022: Review of Philosophy and Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35919561/how-stable-are-moral-judgments
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Paul Rehren, Walter Sinnott-Armstrong
Psychologists and philosophers often work hand in hand to investigate many aspects of moral cognition. In this paper, we want to highlight one aspect that to date has been relatively neglected: the stability of moral judgment over time. After explaining why philosophers and psychologists should consider stability and then surveying previous research, we will present the results of an original three-wave longitudinal study. We asked participants to make judgments about the same acts in a series of sacrificial dilemmas three times, 6-8 days apart...
July 29, 2022: Review of Philosophy and Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35317022/interpersonal-and-collective-affective-niche-construction-empirical-and-normative-perspectives-on-social-media
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michiru Nagatsu, Mikko Salmela
This paper contributes to the interdisciplinary theory of collective affective niche construction, which extends the extended mind (ExM) thesis from cognitive to affective phenomena. Although theoretically innovative, the theory lacks a detailed psychological account of how collective affectivity is scaffolded. It has also been criticized for its uncritical assumption of the subject qua the autonomous user of the affective scaffolding as disposable resources, abstracting away from embedded subjectivity in particular techno-political arrangements...
March 18, 2022: Review of Philosophy and Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35317021/from-generative-models-to-generative-passages-a-computational-approach-to-neuro-phenomenology
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maxwell J D Ramstead, Anil K Seth, Casper Hesp, Lars Sandved-Smith, Jonas Mago, Michael Lifshitz, Giuseppe Pagnoni, Ryan Smith, Guillaume Dumas, Antoine Lutz, Karl Friston, Axel Constant
This paper presents a version of neurophenomenology based on generative modelling techniques developed in computational neuroscience and biology. Our approach can be described as computational phenomenology because it applies methods originally developed in computational modelling to provide a formal model of the descriptions of lived experience in the phenomenological tradition of philosophy (e.g., the work of Edmund Husserl, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, etc.). The first section presents a brief review of the overall project to naturalize phenomenology...
March 18, 2022: Review of Philosophy and Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36164474/is-pain-all-in-your-mind-examining-the-general-public-s-views-of-pain
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tim V Salomons, Richard Harrison, Nat Hansen, James Stazicker, Astrid Grith Sorensen, Paula Thomas, Emma Borg
By definition, pain is a sensory and emotional experience that is felt in a particular part of the body. The precise relationship between somatic events at the site where pain is experienced, and central processing giving rise to the mental experience of pain remains the subject of debate, but there is little disagreement in scholarly circles that both aspects of pain are critical to its experience. Recent experimental work, however, suggests a public view that is at odds with this conceptualisation. By demonstrating that the public does not necessarily endorse central tenets of the "mental" view of pain (subjectivity, privacy, and incorrigibility), experimental philosophers have argued that the public holds a more "body-centric" view than most clinicians and scholars...
2022: Review of Philosophy and Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34777639/students-eat-less-meat-after-studying-meat-ethics
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eric Schwitzgebel, Bradford Cokelet, Peter Singer
In the first controlled, non-self-report studies to show an influence of university-level ethical instruction on everyday behavior, Schwitzgebel et al. (2020) and Jalil et al. (2020) found that students purchase less meat after exposure to material on the ethics of eating meat. We sought to extend and conceptually replicate this research. Seven hundred thirty students in three large philosophy classes read James Rachels' (2004) "Basic Argument for Vegetarianism", followed by 50-min small-group discussions. Half also viewed a vegetarianism advocacy video containing factory farm footage...
November 6, 2021: Review of Philosophy and Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34221192/the-development-and-validation-of-the-epistemic-vice-scale
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marco Meyer, Mark Alfano, Boudewijn de Bruin
This paper presents two studies on the development and validation of a ten-item scale of epistemic vice and the relationship between epistemic vice and misinformation and fake news. Epistemic vices have been defined as character traits that interfere with acquiring, maintaining, and transmitting knowledge. Examples of epistemic vice are gullibility and indifference to knowledge. It has been hypothesized that epistemically vicious people are especially susceptible to misinformation and conspiracy theories. We conducted one exploratory and one confirmatory observational survey study on Amazon Mechanical Turk among people living in the United States (total N  = 1737)...
June 25, 2021: Review of Philosophy and Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34721741/why-do-we-talk-to-ourselves
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Felicity Deamer
Human beings talk to themselves; sometimes out-loud, other times in inner speech. In this paper, I present a resolution to the following dilemma that arises from self-talk. If self-talk exists then either, (i) we know what we are going to say and self-talk serves no communicative purpose, and must serve some other purpose, or (ii) we don't know what we are going to say, and self-talk does serve a communicative purpose, namely, it is an instance of us communicating with ourselves. Adopting (i) was the strategy taken by Bart Geurts, who claims that the primary purpose of self-talk is to entrain commitments, and is not (primarily) communicative...
2021: Review of Philosophy and Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34721740/reporting-in-experimental-philosophy-current-standards-and-recommendations-for-future-practice
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrea Polonioli, Mariana Vega-Mendoza, Brittany Blankinship, David Carmel
Recent replication crises in psychology and other fields have led to intense reflection about the validity of common research practices. Much of this reflection has focussed on reporting standards, and how they may be related to the questionable research practices that could underlie a high proportion of irreproducible findings in the published record. As a developing field, it is particularly important for Experimental Philosophy to avoid some of the pitfalls that have beset other disciplines. To this end, here we provide a detailed, comprehensive assessment of current reporting practices in Experimental Philosophy...
2021: Review of Philosophy and Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32165988/anti-realist-pluralism-a-new-approach-to-folk-metaethics
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Thomas Pölzler, Jennifer Cole Wright
Many metaethicists agree that as ordinary people experience morality as a realm of objective truths, we have a prima facie reason to believe that it actually is such a realm. Recently, worries have been raised about the validity of the extant psychological research on this argument's empirical hypothesis. Our aim is to advance this research, taking these worries into account. First, we propose a new experimental design for measuring folk intuitions about moral objectivity that may serve as an inspiration for future studies...
2020: Review of Philosophy and Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30881528/persuasion-with-limited-sight
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alex Lascarides, Markus Guhe
Humans face many game problems that are too large for the whole game tree to be used in their deliberations about action, and very little is understood about how they cope in such scenarios. However, when a human player's chosen strategy is conditioned on her limited perspective of how the game might progress (Degremont et al. 2016), then it should be possible to manipulate her into changing her planned move by mentioning a possible outcome of an alternative move. This paper demonstrates that human players can be manipulated this way: in the game The Settlers of Catan , where negotiation is only a small part of what one must do to win the game thereby generating uncertainty about which outcomes to the negotiation are good and which are bad, the likelihood that a player accepts a trade offer that deviates from their declared preferred strategy is higher if it is accompanied by a description of what that trade offer can lead to...
2019: Review of Philosophy and Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30595766/a-diverse-and-flexible-teaching-toolkit-facilitates-the-human-capacity-for-cumulative-culture
#16
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emily R R Burdett, Lewis G Dean, Samuel Ronfard
Human culture is uniquely complex compared to other species. This complexity stems from the accumulation of culture over time through high- and low-fidelity transmission and innovation. One possible reason for why humans retain and create culture, is our ability to modulate teaching strategies in order to foster learning and innovation. We argue that teaching is more diverse, flexible, and complex in humans than in other species. This particular characteristic of human teaching rather than teaching itself is one of the reasons for human's incredible capacity for cumulative culture...
2018: Review of Philosophy and Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30595765/human-teaching-and-cumulative-cultural-evolution
#17
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christine A Caldwell, Elizabeth Renner, Mark Atkinson
Although evidence of teaching behaviour has been identified in some nonhuman species, human teaching appears to be unique in terms of both the breadth of contexts within which it is observed, and in its responsiveness to needs of the learner. Similarly, cultural evolution is observable in other species, but human cultural evolution appears strikingly distinct. This has led to speculation that the evolutionary origins of these capacities may be causally linked. Here we provide an overview of contrasting perspectives on the relationship between teaching and cultural evolution in humans, and briefly review previous research which suggests that cumulative culture (here meaning cultural evolution featuring a trend towards improving functionality) can occur without teaching...
2018: Review of Philosophy and Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30220945/how-to-measure-moral-realism
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Thomas Pölzler
In recent years an increasing number of psychologists have begun to explore the prevalence, causes and effects of ordinary people's intuitions about moral realism. Many of these studies have lacked in construct validity, i.e., they have failed to (fully or exclusively) measure moral realism. My aim in this paper accordingly is to motivate and guide methodological improvements. In analysis of prominent existing measures, I develop general recommendations for overcoming ten prima facie serious worries about research on folk moral realism...
2018: Review of Philosophy and Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30220944/rethinking-the-negativity-bias
#19
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer Corns
The negativity bias is a broad psychological principle according to which the negative is more causally efficacious than the positive. Bad, as it is often put, is stronger than good. The principle is widely accepted and often serves as a constraint in affective science. If true, it has significant implications for everyday life and philosophical inquiry. In this article, I submit the negativity bias to its first dose of philosophical scrutiny and argue that it should be rejected. I conclude by offering some alternative hedonic hypotheses that survive the offered arguments and may prove fruitful...
2018: Review of Philosophy and Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30220943/on-deflationary-accounts-of-human-action-understanding
#20
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emma Borg
A common deflationary tendency has emerged recently in both philosophical accounts and comparative animal studies concerned with how subjects understand the actions of others. The suggestion emerging from both arenas is that the default mechanism for understanding action involves only a sensitivity to the observable, behavioural (non-mental) features of a situation. This kind of 'smart behaviour reading' thus suggests that, typically, predicting or explaining the behaviour of conspecifics does not require seeing the other through the lens of mental state attribution...
2018: Review of Philosophy and Psychology
journal
journal
43763
1
2
Fetch more papers »
Fetching more papers... Fetching...
Remove bar
Read by QxMD icon Read
×

Save your favorite articles in one place with a free QxMD account.

×

Search Tips

Use Boolean operators: AND/OR

diabetic AND foot
diabetes OR diabetic

Exclude a word using the 'minus' sign

Virchow -triad

Use Parentheses

water AND (cup OR glass)

Add an asterisk (*) at end of a word to include word stems

Neuro* will search for Neurology, Neuroscientist, Neurological, and so on

Use quotes to search for an exact phrase

"primary prevention of cancer"
(heart or cardiac or cardio*) AND arrest -"American Heart Association"

We want to hear from doctors like you!

Take a second to answer a survey question.