Research
For a brief introduction to some of my research, written for a general audience, see here.
Published Work:
Folk Theories of Time, and other interdisciplinary work:
Shardlow, J., and Lee, R. (forthcoming) The Folk Concept of Time. In N. Emery (Ed.) Routledge Companion to Philosophy of Time. (Get in touch if you'd like to see a final draft version.)
Lee, R., Shardlow, J., Hoerl, C., McCormack, T., O’Connor, P, & Fernandes, A. (2022) Towards an Intuitive Theory of Time. Cognitive Science. (Open Access here.)
Lee, R., Shardlow, J., O'Connor, P., Hotson, L., Hotson, R., Hoerl, C., and McCormack, T. (2022) Past-future preferences for hedonic goods and the utility of experiential memories. Philosophical Psychology. (Open Access here.)
Shardlow, J., Lee, R., Hoerl, C., McCormack, T., Burns, P. & Fernandes, A. (2021) Exploring people’s beliefs about the experience of time. Synthese. (Open Access here.)
Temporal experience and related topics:
Shardlow, J. (2023) Experience, Time, Objects, and Processes. Noûs. (Open Access here.)
Shardlow, J. (2022) Temporal Perspectives and the Phenomenology of Grief. Review of Philosophy and Psychology. (Open Access here.)
Shardlow, J. (2020) No Time to Move: Motion, Painting, and Temporal Experience. Philosophy. (Online here. PDF of pre-print below.)
Shardlow, J. (2019) Minima sensibilia: Against the dynamic snapshot model of temporal experience. European Journal of Philosophy. 27: 741– 757. (Online here. PDF of pre-print below.)
History of Philosophy:
Shardlow, J. (2023) The experience and knowledge of time, through Russell and Moore. British Journal for the History of Philosophy, special issue on Time at the Turn of the Twentieth Century in American-British Philosophy. (Get in touch if you'd like to see a final draft version.)
Shardlow, J. (2020) A Tale of Two Williams: James, Stern, and the Specious present. Philosophical Explorations. (Online here. PDF of pre-print below.)
Other writing:
PhD Thesis: Experiencing (in) Time. Available here.
Drafts:
Contact me if you are interested in draft papers on the following topics, not yet submitted or accepted for publication.
1. On time seeming to pass.
2. Depicting activity, motion, and stasis, in still and moving images.
3. Experiencing over time and the notion of 'an experience'.
4. Kelly (AKA 'Clay') and the genesis of the specious present.
Published Work:
Folk Theories of Time, and other interdisciplinary work:
Shardlow, J., and Lee, R. (forthcoming) The Folk Concept of Time. In N. Emery (Ed.) Routledge Companion to Philosophy of Time. (Get in touch if you'd like to see a final draft version.)
Lee, R., Shardlow, J., Hoerl, C., McCormack, T., O’Connor, P, & Fernandes, A. (2022) Towards an Intuitive Theory of Time. Cognitive Science. (Open Access here.)
Lee, R., Shardlow, J., O'Connor, P., Hotson, L., Hotson, R., Hoerl, C., and McCormack, T. (2022) Past-future preferences for hedonic goods and the utility of experiential memories. Philosophical Psychology. (Open Access here.)
Shardlow, J., Lee, R., Hoerl, C., McCormack, T., Burns, P. & Fernandes, A. (2021) Exploring people’s beliefs about the experience of time. Synthese. (Open Access here.)
Temporal experience and related topics:
Shardlow, J. (2023) Experience, Time, Objects, and Processes. Noûs. (Open Access here.)
Shardlow, J. (2022) Temporal Perspectives and the Phenomenology of Grief. Review of Philosophy and Psychology. (Open Access here.)
Shardlow, J. (2020) No Time to Move: Motion, Painting, and Temporal Experience. Philosophy. (Online here. PDF of pre-print below.)
Shardlow, J. (2019) Minima sensibilia: Against the dynamic snapshot model of temporal experience. European Journal of Philosophy. 27: 741– 757. (Online here. PDF of pre-print below.)
History of Philosophy:
Shardlow, J. (2023) The experience and knowledge of time, through Russell and Moore. British Journal for the History of Philosophy, special issue on Time at the Turn of the Twentieth Century in American-British Philosophy. (Get in touch if you'd like to see a final draft version.)
Shardlow, J. (2020) A Tale of Two Williams: James, Stern, and the Specious present. Philosophical Explorations. (Online here. PDF of pre-print below.)
Other writing:
PhD Thesis: Experiencing (in) Time. Available here.
Drafts:
Contact me if you are interested in draft papers on the following topics, not yet submitted or accepted for publication.
1. On time seeming to pass.
2. Depicting activity, motion, and stasis, in still and moving images.
3. Experiencing over time and the notion of 'an experience'.
4. Kelly (AKA 'Clay') and the genesis of the specious present.
Minima sensibilia.pdf | |
File Size: | 375 kb |
File Type: |
No time to move.pdf | |
File Size: | 515 kb |
File Type: |
A Tale of Two Williams.pdf | |
File Size: | 320 kb |
File Type: |