Howard Robinson (born 2 October 1945) is a British philosopher, specialising in various areas of philosophy of mind and metaphysics, best known for his work in the philosophy of perception. His contributions to philosophy include a defense of sense-datum theories of perception and a variety of arguments against physicalism about the mind. He published an alternative version of the popular Knowledge Argument in his book Matter and Sense independently and in the same year as Frank Jackson, but Robinson's thought experiment involves sounds rather than colors. He is Professor of Philosophy at Central European University and recurring visiting professor at Rutgers University.
Since 1996, he has been a member of the East European committee of the European Society for Analytic Philosophy (ESAP), since 1999 a member of the Steering Committee of ESAP, and since 2002 a member of the Senate of the Central European University.
Philosophy of mind
Robinson advocated philosophical dualism in his book From the Knowledge Argument to Mental Substance: Resurrecting the Mind, published in 2016.[2] He is the editor of Contemporary Dualism: A Defense.[3]
In 2022, he defended a type of idealism in his book Perception and Idealism.[4]
2016: From the Knowledge Argument to Mental Substance: Resurrecting the Mind (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press)
2022: Perception and Idealism, (Oxford: Oxford University Press)
Edited collections
1985: Essays on Berkeley: a Tercentennial Celebration, co-edited with John Foster (Oxford: Clarendon Press) [paperback 1988]
1991: The Pursuit of Mind, co-edited with Raymond Tallis (Manchester: Carcanet Press)
1991: Aristotle and the Later Tradition (Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy, Supp. Vol. 2), co-edited with Henry Blumenthal (Oxford: Clarendon Press)
1993: Objections to Physicalism (Oxford: Clarendon Press) [paperback 1996]
1996: Berkeley's Principles and Three Dialogues (Oxford: Oxford University Press)