Experimental Philosophy
@xphilosopher.bsky.social
An account for experimental philosophy - an interdisciplinary field at the intersection of philosophy and psychology https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Experimental_philosophy#:~:text=Experimental%20philosophy%20is%20an%20emerging,inform%20research%20on%20phi
I appreciated the debate yesterday about how to interpret the results of the cognitive dissonance replication study
Scroll up to read the points made by researchers on both sides
Scroll up to read the points made by researchers on both sides
The whole idea about the paradigm we tested is that manipulation choice rules out the alternative explanations, so it can provide support for the theory, but we didn't find that. We only found effects that can be explained by alternative processes. (Also, I read the paper since I wrote it)
November 7, 2025 at 6:50 PM
I appreciated the debate yesterday about how to interpret the results of the cognitive dissonance replication study
Scroll up to read the points made by researchers on both sides
Scroll up to read the points made by researchers on both sides
Reposted by Experimental Philosophy
Maybe a good time to share my favorite critique of When Prophecy Fails (from 1965!)
November 6, 2025 at 2:16 PM
Maybe a good time to share my favorite critique of When Prophecy Fails (from 1965!)
There’s growing evidence that something was going seriously wrong in the classic early work on cognitive dissonance
Latest revelation: The story in When Prophecy Fails seems to have been fabricated in the most egregious way
But this is not the only one…
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1...
Latest revelation: The story in When Prophecy Fails seems to have been fabricated in the most egregious way
But this is not the only one…
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1...
Debunking “When Prophecy Fails”
In 1954, Dorothy Martin predicted an apocalyptic flood and promised her followers rescue by flying saucers. When neither arrived, she recanted, her group dissolved, and efforts to proselytize ceased....
onlinelibrary.wiley.com
November 6, 2025 at 2:06 PM
There’s growing evidence that something was going seriously wrong in the classic early work on cognitive dissonance
Latest revelation: The story in When Prophecy Fails seems to have been fabricated in the most egregious way
But this is not the only one…
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1...
Latest revelation: The story in When Prophecy Fails seems to have been fabricated in the most egregious way
But this is not the only one…
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1...
There’s a deep difference between sentences like:
(1) Jane caused the glass to break.
vs.
(2) Jane broke the glass.
A surge of experimental philosophy research has led to some surprising discoveries about sentences like (2)
[Thread]
(1) Jane caused the glass to break.
vs.
(2) Jane broke the glass.
A surge of experimental philosophy research has led to some surprising discoveries about sentences like (2)
[Thread]
October 27, 2025 at 1:49 PM
There’s a deep difference between sentences like:
(1) Jane caused the glass to break.
vs.
(2) Jane broke the glass.
A surge of experimental philosophy research has led to some surprising discoveries about sentences like (2)
[Thread]
(1) Jane caused the glass to break.
vs.
(2) Jane broke the glass.
A surge of experimental philosophy research has led to some surprising discoveries about sentences like (2)
[Thread]
Reposted by Experimental Philosophy
Ryan Doran is getting to the philosophical bottom of true beauty in this open access 🔓 advance article...
...by ranking the most beautiful philosophers' bottoms 🍎. (You'll never believe who made number 5 😱).* doi.org/10.1093/aest...
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*might be bollocks.
...by ranking the most beautiful philosophers' bottoms 🍎. (You'll never believe who made number 5 😱).* doi.org/10.1093/aest...
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*might be bollocks.
October 26, 2025 at 8:54 PM
Ryan Doran is getting to the philosophical bottom of true beauty in this open access 🔓 advance article...
...by ranking the most beautiful philosophers' bottoms 🍎. (You'll never believe who made number 5 😱).* doi.org/10.1093/aest...
ㅤㅤ
ㅤ
ㅤ
ㅤ
ㅤ
ㅤ
*might be bollocks.
...by ranking the most beautiful philosophers' bottoms 🍎. (You'll never believe who made number 5 😱).* doi.org/10.1093/aest...
ㅤㅤ
ㅤ
ㅤ
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*might be bollocks.
Reposted by Experimental Philosophy
We're excited to announce that Cognitive Science at Dartmouth is recruiting PhD students to work collaboratively with me, Steven Frankland, and Fred Callaway. Come study the principles and mechanisms that enable us to understand, plan, and act in the world! Info: sites.dartmouth.edu/cogscigrad/
Cognitive Science Graduate Admissions – Information about graduate admissions from the cognitive science faculty
sites.dartmouth.edu
October 23, 2025 at 5:30 PM
We're excited to announce that Cognitive Science at Dartmouth is recruiting PhD students to work collaboratively with me, Steven Frankland, and Fred Callaway. Come study the principles and mechanisms that enable us to understand, plan, and act in the world! Info: sites.dartmouth.edu/cogscigrad/
Reposted by Experimental Philosophy
New paper in Synthèse. Open access.
Concepts of health and disease: insights from experimental philosophy of medicine - Synthese
Synthese - The aim of the paper is to explore how people understand the concepts of health and disease, including the factors that influence their judgments about whether a condition is a disease...
link.springer.com
October 20, 2025 at 8:28 PM
New paper in Synthèse. Open access.
Reposted by Experimental Philosophy
"...the “problem of perception” needs to be reconceptualized as arising not from a challenge to our ordinary understanding of vision, but from a patent conflict within this understanding."
That is the central thought of Mike Martin's defense of disjunctivism
That is the central thought of Mike Martin's defense of disjunctivism
In philosophy of perception, we find different intuitions pulling people in opposing directions
New studies from Eugen Fischer et al. show something important about that opposition:
It is not different people having different intuitions; it's each individual person having *conflicting intuitions*
New studies from Eugen Fischer et al. show something important about that opposition:
It is not different people having different intuitions; it's each individual person having *conflicting intuitions*
Scientific or naïve? Perceptions of direct and indirect realism, and why they matter
Philosophical debates about the nature of perception are standardly informed by an empirical assumption about folk beliefs: They assume there is such a thing as “the” common-sense conception of visio...
onlinelibrary.wiley.com
October 15, 2025 at 7:39 PM
"...the “problem of perception” needs to be reconceptualized as arising not from a challenge to our ordinary understanding of vision, but from a patent conflict within this understanding."
That is the central thought of Mike Martin's defense of disjunctivism
That is the central thought of Mike Martin's defense of disjunctivism
In philosophy of perception, we find different intuitions pulling people in opposing directions
New studies from Eugen Fischer et al. show something important about that opposition:
It is not different people having different intuitions; it's each individual person having *conflicting intuitions*
New studies from Eugen Fischer et al. show something important about that opposition:
It is not different people having different intuitions; it's each individual person having *conflicting intuitions*
Scientific or naïve? Perceptions of direct and indirect realism, and why they matter
Philosophical debates about the nature of perception are standardly informed by an empirical assumption about folk beliefs: They assume there is such a thing as “the” common-sense conception of visio...
onlinelibrary.wiley.com
October 15, 2025 at 7:34 PM
In philosophy of perception, we find different intuitions pulling people in opposing directions
New studies from Eugen Fischer et al. show something important about that opposition:
It is not different people having different intuitions; it's each individual person having *conflicting intuitions*
New studies from Eugen Fischer et al. show something important about that opposition:
It is not different people having different intuitions; it's each individual person having *conflicting intuitions*
Reposted by Experimental Philosophy
Feels like a natural experimental philosophy of medicine project: is “addictive” an inherently normative term? (My guess: yes.)
I see talk about things being "designed to be addictive" (like cigarettes, social media, online sports betting, etc.)
Is there a scientific distinction between "designed to be addictive" and "designed to get you to use them more"? Or are these just synonyms?
Is there a scientific distinction between "designed to be addictive" and "designed to get you to use them more"? Or are these just synonyms?
October 2, 2025 at 10:28 PM
Feels like a natural experimental philosophy of medicine project: is “addictive” an inherently normative term? (My guess: yes.)
This free online event is TOMORROW
The goal is to bring together two communities of researchers – folks in experimental pragmatics and folks in experimental philosophy
The goal is to bring together two communities of researchers – folks in experimental pragmatics and folks in experimental philosophy
XPrag Meets X-Phi
An online event bringing together two research communities: experimental pragmatics and experimental philosophy
sites.google.com/view/xprag-w...
An online event bringing together two research communities: experimental pragmatics and experimental philosophy
sites.google.com/view/xprag-w...
October 1, 2025 at 2:50 PM
This free online event is TOMORROW
The goal is to bring together two communities of researchers – folks in experimental pragmatics and folks in experimental philosophy
The goal is to bring together two communities of researchers – folks in experimental pragmatics and folks in experimental philosophy
I don’t understand why one would think we are getting evidence against the reliability of intuitions when we find correlations between intuitions and personality traits
Suppose we run a study and find that 60% or people give one response, 40% give the opposite response…
1/
Suppose we run a study and find that 60% or people give one response, 40% give the opposite response…
1/
New in Philosophical Psychology: Derek Anderson & I review Feltz & Cokely’s Diversity and Disagreement (OUP, 2024). We applaud their empirical rigor linking personality & philosophical views, but question their (to our minds) overly hasty and sweeping philosophical conclusions.🧵
September 29, 2025 at 7:46 PM
I don’t understand why one would think we are getting evidence against the reliability of intuitions when we find correlations between intuitions and personality traits
Suppose we run a study and find that 60% or people give one response, 40% give the opposite response…
1/
Suppose we run a study and find that 60% or people give one response, 40% give the opposite response…
1/
Reposted by Experimental Philosophy
Psychophysics meets moral psych! In the best possible way!
I worry what this means for clinical research and patient reported outcomes, which often measure things like pain on a very simple 1-10 scale, often without clear anchoring.
Such important work by
@vladchituc.bsky.social!
I worry what this means for clinical research and patient reported outcomes, which often measure things like pain on a very simple 1-10 scale, often without clear anchoring.
Such important work by
@vladchituc.bsky.social!
September 29, 2025 at 11:35 AM
Psychophysics meets moral psych! In the best possible way!
I worry what this means for clinical research and patient reported outcomes, which often measure things like pain on a very simple 1-10 scale, often without clear anchoring.
Such important work by
@vladchituc.bsky.social!
I worry what this means for clinical research and patient reported outcomes, which often measure things like pain on a very simple 1-10 scale, often without clear anchoring.
Such important work by
@vladchituc.bsky.social!
Mikayla Kelley has an important new paper on why human beings even have a concept of intentional action
The key question: What does this concept do in our lives?
Her answer: Since we can't possibly evaluate all actions, it helps us choose which ones to evaluate
philpapers.org/rec/KELTNF-3
The key question: What does this concept do in our lives?
Her answer: Since we can't possibly evaluate all actions, it helps us choose which ones to evaluate
philpapers.org/rec/KELTNF-3
Mikayla Kelley, The Normative Function of Intentional Action - PhilPapers
This essay identifies a normative function of the concept of intentional action. Specifically, I argue that the concept of intentional action functions to focus our evaluative concern on some doings r...
philpapers.org
September 27, 2025 at 2:50 PM
Mikayla Kelley has an important new paper on why human beings even have a concept of intentional action
The key question: What does this concept do in our lives?
Her answer: Since we can't possibly evaluate all actions, it helps us choose which ones to evaluate
philpapers.org/rec/KELTNF-3
The key question: What does this concept do in our lives?
Her answer: Since we can't possibly evaluate all actions, it helps us choose which ones to evaluate
philpapers.org/rec/KELTNF-3
People sometimes face a conflict between intuition (system 1) and reasoning (system 2)
In cases like these, which will be seen as the person’s true self?
In cases like these, which will be seen as the person’s true self?
September 23, 2025 at 8:33 PM
People sometimes face a conflict between intuition (system 1) and reasoning (system 2)
In cases like these, which will be seen as the person’s true self?
In cases like these, which will be seen as the person’s true self?
Reposted by Experimental Philosophy
💖This paper has been ~11 years in the making - and probably my favorite project of all time. Thrilled to see it in @pnas.org! I'm so lucky that Zach decided to do a second PhD and join my lab @psychillinois.bsky.social back in 2014 - a fabulous scientist & human being! www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...
September 22, 2025 at 2:27 PM
💖This paper has been ~11 years in the making - and probably my favorite project of all time. Thrilled to see it in @pnas.org! I'm so lucky that Zach decided to do a second PhD and join my lab @psychillinois.bsky.social back in 2014 - a fabulous scientist & human being! www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...
Reposted by Experimental Philosophy
The fabulous @jrabanos.bsky.social and @BojanSpaic discussed experimental jurisprudence with me in their awesome podcast! If you want to know why experimental jurisprudence is not like theoretical physics, or what does lying and reasonableness have in common, check it out!
Ep. #10 of Heavily Accented Philosophy of Law Podcast is here!
In this episode, we delve with Iza Skoczeń (@izaskoczen.bsky.social - Jagiellonian Centre for Law, Language and Philosophy) into the topic of experimental jurisprudence.
Listen to it here 👇
creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/...
In this episode, we delve with Iza Skoczeń (@izaskoczen.bsky.social - Jagiellonian Centre for Law, Language and Philosophy) into the topic of experimental jurisprudence.
Listen to it here 👇
creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/...
Episode 10 - Experimental Jurisprudence (ft. Izabela Skoczeń) by Heavily Accented Philosophy of Law
In this episode, we delve into the debate about experimental jurisprudence (also known as xJur). What is exactly “experimental jurisprudence”? What is in turn “experimental philosophy”? What are the m...
creators.spotify.com
September 16, 2025 at 7:53 AM
The fabulous @jrabanos.bsky.social and @BojanSpaic discussed experimental jurisprudence with me in their awesome podcast! If you want to know why experimental jurisprudence is not like theoretical physics, or what does lying and reasonableness have in common, check it out!
One common view in moral psychology is “the primacy of the moral” - the view that people think your moral traits are what’s most fundamental about you
These new studies challenge that view, suggesting that people sometimes see artistic creation as just as fundamental as morality
These new studies challenge that view, suggesting that people sometimes see artistic creation as just as fundamental as morality
you're having a sliding doors moment--you can either become a great artist or a great philanthropist. what path will make you feel like you've found your true self? @jowylie.bsky.social & @mattlindauer.bsky.social and i find that arts provide a unique one static1.squarespace.com/static/679ee...
September 17, 2025 at 1:29 PM
One common view in moral psychology is “the primacy of the moral” - the view that people think your moral traits are what’s most fundamental about you
These new studies challenge that view, suggesting that people sometimes see artistic creation as just as fundamental as morality
These new studies challenge that view, suggesting that people sometimes see artistic creation as just as fundamental as morality
Reposted by Experimental Philosophy
Ep. #10 of Heavily Accented Philosophy of Law Podcast is here!
In this episode, we delve with Iza Skoczeń (@izaskoczen.bsky.social - Jagiellonian Centre for Law, Language and Philosophy) into the topic of experimental jurisprudence.
Listen to it here 👇
creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/...
In this episode, we delve with Iza Skoczeń (@izaskoczen.bsky.social - Jagiellonian Centre for Law, Language and Philosophy) into the topic of experimental jurisprudence.
Listen to it here 👇
creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/...
Episode 10 - Experimental Jurisprudence (ft. Izabela Skoczeń) by Heavily Accented Philosophy of Law
In this episode, we delve into the debate about experimental jurisprudence (also known as xJur). What is exactly “experimental jurisprudence”? What is in turn “experimental philosophy”? What are the m...
creators.spotify.com
September 16, 2025 at 7:20 AM
Ep. #10 of Heavily Accented Philosophy of Law Podcast is here!
In this episode, we delve with Iza Skoczeń (@izaskoczen.bsky.social - Jagiellonian Centre for Law, Language and Philosophy) into the topic of experimental jurisprudence.
Listen to it here 👇
creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/...
In this episode, we delve with Iza Skoczeń (@izaskoczen.bsky.social - Jagiellonian Centre for Law, Language and Philosophy) into the topic of experimental jurisprudence.
Listen to it here 👇
creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/...
Reposted by Experimental Philosophy
New paper with @jowylie.bsky.social and @anagantman.bsky.social on art, morality, and the true self, forthcoming in Cognition! #philsky #psysky
you're having a sliding doors moment--you can either become a great artist or a great philanthropist. what path will make you feel like you've found your true self? @jowylie.bsky.social & @mattlindauer.bsky.social and i find that arts provide a unique one static1.squarespace.com/static/679ee...
September 15, 2025 at 3:59 PM
New paper with @jowylie.bsky.social and @anagantman.bsky.social on art, morality, and the true self, forthcoming in Cognition! #philsky #psysky
Reposted by Experimental Philosophy
Does ‘discrimination’ inherently imply unfairness, hence making it an evaluative (rather than a descriptive) term?
Research by Willemsen et al concludes it is a “thick concept” that fundamentally blends descriptive and evaluative content:
buff.ly/DUysv3c
HT @xphilosopher.bsky.social
Research by Willemsen et al concludes it is a “thick concept” that fundamentally blends descriptive and evaluative content:
buff.ly/DUysv3c
HT @xphilosopher.bsky.social
September 9, 2025 at 8:18 AM
Does ‘discrimination’ inherently imply unfairness, hence making it an evaluative (rather than a descriptive) term?
Research by Willemsen et al concludes it is a “thick concept” that fundamentally blends descriptive and evaluative content:
buff.ly/DUysv3c
HT @xphilosopher.bsky.social
Research by Willemsen et al concludes it is a “thick concept” that fundamentally blends descriptive and evaluative content:
buff.ly/DUysv3c
HT @xphilosopher.bsky.social
Experimental philosophy paper by Pascale Willemsen et al. on on what it means for something to be "discrimination"
The studies focus specifically on discrimination -- but I think they also showing something more general about how thick concepts work
philpapers.org/archive/WILD...
The studies focus specifically on discrimination -- but I think they also showing something more general about how thick concepts work
philpapers.org/archive/WILD...
September 7, 2025 at 7:53 PM
Experimental philosophy paper by Pascale Willemsen et al. on on what it means for something to be "discrimination"
The studies focus specifically on discrimination -- but I think they also showing something more general about how thick concepts work
philpapers.org/archive/WILD...
The studies focus specifically on discrimination -- but I think they also showing something more general about how thick concepts work
philpapers.org/archive/WILD...
Reposted by Experimental Philosophy
What People Think Self-Deception Is and Why Philosophers Should Care
A summary of our x-phi paper (w/ @ivarr.bsky.social ) in the terrific Imperfect Cognitions blog. 🙌
A summary of our x-phi paper (w/ @ivarr.bsky.social ) in the terrific Imperfect Cognitions blog. 🙌
This week, we are happy to have Carme Isern-Mas and Ivar R. Hannikainen presenting their paper, "Self-Deception: A Case Study in Folk Conceptual Structure", recently published in Review of Philosophy and Psychology.
#philsky #philpsy
imperfectcognitions....
#philsky #philpsy
imperfectcognitions....
September 4, 2025 at 8:37 AM
What People Think Self-Deception Is and Why Philosophers Should Care
A summary of our x-phi paper (w/ @ivarr.bsky.social ) in the terrific Imperfect Cognitions blog. 🙌
A summary of our x-phi paper (w/ @ivarr.bsky.social ) in the terrific Imperfect Cognitions blog. 🙌
Reposted by Experimental Philosophy
Final call for global collaborators on this replication collaboration on @bioxphi studies — moral psychologists and x-phi researchers wanted! especially based in SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE! global-bioXphi | moral science lab www.mscilab.com/globalbioxphi/
August 29, 2025 at 11:57 PM
Final call for global collaborators on this replication collaboration on @bioxphi studies — moral psychologists and x-phi researchers wanted! especially based in SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE! global-bioXphi | moral science lab www.mscilab.com/globalbioxphi/
Reposted by Experimental Philosophy
🚨Publication Alert🚨
“Are the concepts of truth and lying shared across cultures?”
5 years in the making
~ 5000 participants
10 countries
6 languages
Forthcoming in American Psychologist
With @louisareins.bsky.social, . Mizumoto, A. Erut, Q. Li, and S. Orr.
Short thread and preprint below
“Are the concepts of truth and lying shared across cultures?”
5 years in the making
~ 5000 participants
10 countries
6 languages
Forthcoming in American Psychologist
With @louisareins.bsky.social, . Mizumoto, A. Erut, Q. Li, and S. Orr.
Short thread and preprint below
August 27, 2025 at 4:41 PM
🚨Publication Alert🚨
“Are the concepts of truth and lying shared across cultures?”
5 years in the making
~ 5000 participants
10 countries
6 languages
Forthcoming in American Psychologist
With @louisareins.bsky.social, . Mizumoto, A. Erut, Q. Li, and S. Orr.
Short thread and preprint below
“Are the concepts of truth and lying shared across cultures?”
5 years in the making
~ 5000 participants
10 countries
6 languages
Forthcoming in American Psychologist
With @louisareins.bsky.social, . Mizumoto, A. Erut, Q. Li, and S. Orr.
Short thread and preprint below