Howard Robinson


Howard Robinson 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.

Education and qualifications

Robinson received his early education at the Manchester Grammar School, going up to the University of Oxford to read P.P.E. at Corpus Christi College, graduating in 1967. He read for a research M.Phil. at the University of Nottingham, and continued postgraduate research at Corpus Christi College. In 2000 he was awarded a Ph.D. by the University of Liverpool for his published work.

Positions held

After four years at Oriel College, Oxford as full-time stipendiary lecturer in philosophy he took up a lectureship at the University of Liverpool. He stayed at Liverpool for twenty-six years, becoming first Senior Lecturer then reader, apart from a period as Soros Professor of Philosophy at Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary. In 2000 he was appointed Professor of Philosophy at the Central European University in Hungary. In fall 2012 he was Professor of Philosophy at .. He is currently Professor of Philosophy at Central European University in Vienna and Budapest and recurring visiting professor at Rutgers University. He teaches graduate seminars on philosophy of mind and philosophy of perception at both institutions.
Since 1996 he has been a member of the East European committee of the European Society for Analytic Philosophy, since 1999 a member of the Steering Committee of ESAP, and since 2002 a member of the Senate of the Central European University.

Books

Monographs