Michael Martin
Wilde Professor of Mental Philosophy
RESEARCH SUMMARY
My work lies in the philosophy of mind and the philosophy of psychology, although I also have an interest in the history of early modern and early analytic philosophy.
My research has principally been in the philosophy of perception. Much of this has circled round two of the oldest and most disreputable arguments in the Western tradition: the argument from illusion and the causal argument from hallucination, but it has on occasion ranged more widely than just these narrow concerns: on the nature of memory, on the nature of self-awareness and self-knowledge. I’ve also long been concerned with the relations among the senses and as part of that interested in the awareness that each has of his or her own body.
In Oxford, I divide my time between the Faculty of Philosophy and the Department of Experimental Psychology. But I also spend every Fall semester (Michaelmas Term) as Mills Adjunct Professor of Philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley.
Recent publications
All in Good Time: On Scheffler's One Life to Lead Ch 2
Journal article
Martin MGF., (2026), Journal of Value Inquiry
Family and marriage: Institutions and the need for social goods
Journal article
Munoz-Dardé V. and MARTIN M., (2023), Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume, 97, 221 - 247
The Diversity of Experiences
Journal article
MARTIN M., (2020), Philosophy and Phenomenological Research