Dr. Alison Fernandes
Assistant Professor, Philosophy
Publications and Further Research Outputs
Peer-Reviewed Publications
Fernandes, Alison, The Branchpoint Proposal and the Role of Counterfactuals, The Journal of Philosophy, 2024, p1-34
Alison Fernandes, The Temporal Asymmetry of Causation, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2023
Alison Fernandes, How to Explain the Direction of Time, Synthese, 200, (5), 2022, p1 - 30
Alison Fernandes, Back to the Present: How Not to Use Counterfactuals to Explain Causal Asymmetry, Philosophies, 7, (2), 2022, p1 - 12
Lee, Ruth; Shardlow, Jack; Hoerl, Christoph; O'Connor, Patrick A.; Fernandes, Alison S; McCormack, Teresa, Toward an Account of Intuitive Time, Cognitive Science, 46, (7), 2022, p1 - 42
Alison Fernandes, Time Travel and Counterfactual Asymmetry, Synthese, 2021, p1983 - 2001
Jack Shardlow, Ruth Lee, Christoph Hoerl, Teresa McCormack, Patrick Burns & Alison S. Fernandes, Exploring people's beliefs about the experience of time, Synthese , 198, (11), 2021, p10709 - 10731
Alison Fernandes, Freedom, Self-Prediction, and the Possibility of Time Travel, Philosophical Studies, 177, 2020, p89 - 108
Ruth Lee Christoph Hoerl Patrick Burns Alison S. Fernandes Patrick A. O'Connor Teresa McCormack, Pain in the Past and Pleasure in the Future: The Development of Past-Future Preferences for Hedonic Goods, Cogntive Science, 44, (9), 2020, p1 - 40
Alison Fernandes, Does the Temporal Asymmetry of Value Support a Tensed Metaphysics?, Synthese, 198, (5), 2019, p3999 - 4016
Alison Sutton Fernandes, A Deliberative Approach to Causation, Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 95, (3), 2017, p686 - 708
Alison Fernandes, Varieties of Epistemic Freedom, Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 94, (4), 2016, p1 - 16
Non-Peer-Reviewed Publications
The Direction of Time in, editor(s)Nina Emery , Routledge Companion to Philosophy of Time, London, 2024, pp11 , [Fernandes, Alison]
Time, Flies, and Why We Can't Control the Past in, editor(s)Barry Loewer, Eric Winsberg, Brad Weslake , The Probability Map of the Universe: Essays on David Albert's Time and Chance, Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press, 2023, [Alison Fernandes]
Naturalism, Functionalism and Chance: Not a Best Fit for the Humean in, editor(s)Michael Hicks, Siegrfied Jaag, Christian Loew , Humean Laws for Human Agents, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2023, [Alison Fernandes]
Caring for Our Future Selves in, editor(s)Christoph Hoerl, Teresa McCormack, Alison Fernandes , Temporal Asymmetries in Philosophy and Psychology, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2022, pp181 - 203, [Alison Fernandes]
Christoph Hoerl, Teresa McCormack, Alison Fernandes, Temporal Asymmetries in Philosophy and Psychology, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2022, 1 - 299pp
Temporal Asymmetries in Philosophy and Psychology: An Introduction in, editor(s)Christoph Hoerl, Teresa McCormack, Alison Fernandes , Temporal Asymmetries in Philosophy and Psychology, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2022, pp1 - 28, [Christoph Hoerl, Teresa McCormack, Alison Fernandes]
Causation: Further Themes, Jonathan Tallant , Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Version 2, https://www.rep.routledge.com/articles/thematic/causation-further-themes/v-2. , Taylor and Francis, 2018, [Alison Fernandes]
Alison Fernandes, A deliberative account of causation: How the evidence of deliberating agents accounts for causation and its temporal direction, Columbia University, 2016
Research Expertise
Description
I work in the metaphysics of science to develop accounts of scientific relations, including laws, causation and probabilities. My method of doing so is to think about why we reason about the world using these relations. In the case of causation, for example, we reason about the world using causal terms because doing so is essential in contexts where we must deliberate and decide what to do. So, even though causal relations don"t appear in how fundamental physical theories are formulated, they are a necessary part of our theorising. Using the function of scientific relations, I explain what these relations are and how they relate to the posits of fundamental physics. Considerations of agency also contribute to explaining temporal asymmetries in these relations, such as why causes come before their effects, or why we think of the past but not the future as 'chancy'. These asymmetries partly reflect the fact that we live our lives oriented in time"we make choices about the future and regarding the past as fixed"even if the orientation of our own lives should itself be explained in physical terms. Ultimately, considering our own needs as temporally oriented agents is essential for explaining our scientific view of the world. This approach to the metaphysics of science contributes to our understanding of the function of science, helps relate different scientific theories to one another and provides a unified picture of temporal asymmetries"explaining how they relate and how they might ultimately be traced back to entropic features of the universe. While these are longstanding projects in philosophy, what is particularly unusual in my approach combining a focus on physics and agency: using our relation to science to think through our scientific view of the world.Recognition
Awards and Honours
Research Ally Award, Irish Research Council
Lina Kahn Metaphysics Essay Prize, Columbia University
Charles Frankel Memorial Fund Fellowship, Columbia University (faculty nominated)
Sidney Morgenbesser Fellowship, Columbia University (faculty nominated)
David H. Siff Philosophy of Science Essay Prize, Columbia University
Columbia University Faculty Fellow (full funding)
University of Sydney Postgraduate Award (full funding)
University Medal for Philosophy, University of Sydney
Walter Reid Memorial Prize for Academic Performance in Arts, University of Sydney
Dean's List of Excellence in Academic Performance, University of Sydney
Honours Scholarship, University of Sydney (full tuition funding)