Professor Colin Allen
Colin Allen, Ph.D. is director of the NEH funded Indiana Philosophy Ontology
(InPhO) project, Associate Editor of the
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Associate Editor
of Noesis: Philosophical Research
Online,
Academic Editor of
PLoS One (Public Library of Science), and is on the
Editorial Board
of
Behavior and Philosophy.
He is also coauthor of a logic textbook,
Logic Primer, and co-developer of two
logic
instructional sites on the world wide web at
http://logic.tamu.edu and
http://www.poweroflogic.com.
His appointment at IU is split between HPS and the Cognitive Science Program. He
is also a member of IU’s Center for the Integrative
Study of Animal Behavior and adjunct professor in the Philosophy Department at IU.
Colin is coauthor of
Moral Machines: Teaching Robots Right from
Wrong,
Species of Mind: The Philosophy and Biology of Cognitive
Ethology
and coeditor of
The Evolution of Mind,
Nature’s Purposes,
The Cognitive Animal: Empirical and Theoretical Perspectives on
Animal Cognition,
and Philosophy Across the Life Sciences (MIT
Press, in press). He is also co-editor of a special issue of
the journal
Biology and Philosophy (Dec. 2004) on
animal cognition, in which he has a paper titled
Is Anyone a Cognitive Ethologist? and a forthcoming
special issue of the journal
Synthese on
“Representing Philosophy” covering the
applications of digital technologies to philosophy.
Read the
full list of his publications!
His papers include
Intentional Communication and Social Play: How and Why Animals
Negotiate
and Agree to Play,
Prolegomena to any future artificial moral agent,
Why Machine Ethics?,
Animal
Pain,
Animal Consciousness,
Teleological Notions in Biology,
Android Ethics: Bottom-up and Top-down Approaches for
Modeling Human Moral Faculties,
A Dynamic Ontology for a Dynamic Reference Work.
A Skeptic’s Progress,
Transitive inference in animals: Reasoning or conditioned
associations?, and
How to Reason without Words:
Inference as Categorization.
Colin earned his B.A. in philosophy from
University College London in 1982 and his Ph.D. in
philosophy from UCLA in 1989. He has broad research
interests in the general area of philosophy of biology and
cognitive science, and is best known for his work on animal
behavior and cognition. He has received funding from the
National Science Foundation and the National Endowment for
the Humanities.
Watch
Robot morality and moral machines: Colin Allen.
Read
Pentagon hires British scientist to help build robot soldiers that
“won’t commit war crimes” and
Six ways to build robots that do humans no harm.