Recently, an alleged anthropomorphism at the core of enactivism has been discussed given the reliance on phenomenology when examining life and mind. In a new paper, I address the role that phenomenology can play concerning biology within enactivism. link.springer.com/article/10.1...
One of the ideas that characterises the enactive approach to cognition is that life and mind are deeply continuous, which means that both phenomena share the same basic set of organisational and pheno...
New preprint: “Deep computational neurophenomenology: A methodological framework for investigating the how of experience” Exciting collaboration with Lars Sandved Smith, @antoinelutz.bsky.social@jdbogotaj.bsky.socialosf.io/preprints/os...
In most of my papers, I ramble on about time-consciousness and its importance for our understanding of consciousness. But that is only half of the story! As I see it, temporality and affectivity come together. In this new paper, I explain why. link.springer.com/article/10.1...
One of the (many) things I hate about grading is that, not being a native English speaker, finding awkwardly written phrases makes me go in a downward spiral in which I doubt myself before considering the fact that some of those phrases simply don't make any sense, which makes grading take longer
As an undergrad, I’d often skip writing research questions that lecturers asked us to write before writing final essays for their modules. I’d go directly to writing the essay. I regret it. I feel like I don’t know how to write a compelling & concrete proposal even when I feel I have good intuitions
Why did nobody tell me about the overlap between trying to finish my PhD thesis and trying to come up with a research project for a potential postdoc?
Sometimes I'm like "I'm all for the naturalization of phenomenology", but other times I'm more like "When we mix phenomenological and empirical categories everything stops making sense".
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