David Chalmers  

I am a philosopher at the Australian National University. Officially I am Professor of Philosophy, Director of the Centre for Consciousness, and an ARC Federation Fellow. I work in the philosophy of mind and in related areas of philosophy and cognitive science. I am especially interested in consciousness, but am also interested in philosophical issues about meaning and possibility, in the foundations of cognitive science and of physics, and a bunch of other things. 

This site includes quite a bit of my own work (e.g. papers on consciousness and papers on meaning and modality), and it also includes a number of resources I've put together on topics related to consciousness and/or philosophy: e.g., MindPapers (a bibliography), directories of online papers, and some philosophical diversions. There is also a photo gallery. A complete master index to this site's contents is available.

WHAT'S NEW:

My work

Resources


Background

My undergraduate degree was in mathematics and computer science at the University of Adelaide in Australia. I was a graduate student in mathematics for a while at the University of Oxford, but then I switched to Indiana University, where I obtained a Ph.D. in 1993 in Philosophy and Cognitive Science, working in Doug Hofstadter's Center for Research on Concepts and Cognition. I spent 1993-95 as a McDonnell Fellow in Philosophy, Neuroscience, and Psychology at Washington University in St. Louis, and 1995-98 in the Department of Philosophy at UC Santa Cruz. From 1999-2004 I was in the Department of Philosophy and the Center for Consciousness Studies at the University of Arizona. I moved to ANU in August 2004. A photo gallery is here.



Research

When I have time and run out of excuses, I sometimes do some real work. I've written one book (below) and have been closely involved with another. I've written articles on consciousness, metaphysics and meaning, AI and computation, and various other topics in philosophy and cognitive science (see top of page). Consciousness is my first love, and it's what I always come back to, but one of the nice things about being a philosopher is that one is allowed to be interested in all sorts of things. (If you get interested in X, you just say "I'm working on the philosophy of X"). I do a lot of fairly technical philosophy (metaphysics, philosophy of language) as well as being closely involved with work in science - originally AI and physics, but lately more in neuroscience and psychology. At the moment, I am working on a book on consciousness and on a book (or a series of books) concerning the connections between reason, meaning, and possibility.


The Conscious Mind:
In Search of a Fundamental Theory

My book on consciousness was published in April 1996, with Oxford University Press. Its web page has a few bits and pieces, such as the table of contents, the introduction, some reviews, and other information.





Explaining Consciousness:
The Hard Problem

This collection (edited by Jonathan Shear) was published in 1997 by MIT Press. It has a keynote article by me, 26 responses from all sorts of perspectives, and my response to all these in turn. See its web page for contents.


Philosophy of Mind:
Classical and Contemporary Readings


This is an anthology of readings in the philosophy of mind, edited by me, and published by Oxford University Press in August 2002. Its web page has the table of contents and an ever growing list of typos.




David Chalmers, Philosophy Program, RSSS, Canberra ACT 0200, Australia.
E-mail: chalmers at anu dot edu dot au