Michael G. F. Martin
Michael Gerard Fitzgerald Martin (born 1962) is a British philosopher[1] who is currently Wilde Professor of Mental Philosophy at the University of Oxford and Mills Adjunct Professor of Philosophy at UC Berkeley.[2]
Michael Martin | |
---|---|
Education | University of Oxford (PhD) |
Era | 21st-century philosophy |
Region | Western philosophy |
School | Analytic |
Institutions | University of Oxford |
Thesis | The context of experience (1992) |
Main interests | philosophy of mind |
Notable ideas | naive realism |
Education and career
Martin studied at Oxford University where he won The Henry Wilde Prize in Philosophy in 1985 and earned his D.Phil. in 1992.[3] He joined the faculty at University College London in 1992, and was promoted to Professor of Philosophy there in 2002.[4]
Philosophical work
Martin works in philosophy of mind, specifically perception. He defends "naive realism" "the view that perception constitutively involves relations of awareness of the ordinary, mind-independent world around us."[5]
References
- "The Sophisticated Naïve: An Interview with Michael G. F. Martin" (in Norwegian Bokmål).
- https://www.ccc.ox.ac.uk/Fellows-2/f/66/
- "The Henry Wilde Prize in Philosophy". www.philosophy.ox.ac.uk.
- https://www.ccc.ox.ac.uk/Fellows-2/f/66/
- https://filosofisksupplement.no/the-imporance-of-being-naive-an-interview-with-michael-g-f-martin/
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