Chenwei Nie
Hi there,
Welcome to my website!
I am a Teaching Fellow in Philosophy at the University of Warwick, and a member of the Warwick Mind and Action Research Centre (WMA). I also serve as a PhD Committee Member at the Research School of Psychology, Australian National University.
My research interests are in philosophy of psychiatry, philosophy of mind, cognitive science, and epistemology. I am the editor of the 'Delusions', 'Seemings', and 'Location of Pain' categories on PhilPapers.
Previously, I held a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Fellowship at the Jagiellonian University in Poland, and a part-time Research Assistantship at the WMA. I completed my PhD at Warwick in 2022, fully funded by a Chancellor's International Scholarship.
You can find me on the following platforms as well:
PhilPeople GoogleScholar ResearchGate SemanticScholar ORCID
Please do get in touch (chenwei.nie {a-] outlook.com) for more information, or for a chat!
Cheers!
New Publications
(forthcoming). Akratic Beliefs and Seemings. Australasian Journal of Philosophy.
(2023). Revisiting Maher’s One-Factor Theory of Delusion. Neuroethics 16, 15.
A shorter version for a general audience is posted on Imperfect Cognitions.
This paper recently received an intriguing commentary by Ema Sullivan-Bissett and Paul Noordhof (2024). (My replies are on the way.)
(2023). Can a Bodily Theorist of Pain Speak Mandarin?. Philosophia 51, 261–272.
Upcoming Talks
05/2024. 'Delusion and Experience', The international symposium Engaging Rationality Today, Lille University, France.
07/2024. 'Why Rational People Obstinately Hold to Irrational Beliefs: A New Approach', The 31st Annual Meeting of the European Society for Philosophy and Psychology, Université Grenoble-Alpes, France.
07/2024. 'Why Rational People Obstinately Hold to Irrational Beliefs: A New Approach', The 98th Joint Session of the Aristotelian Society and the Mind Association, University of Birmingham, UK.
07/2024. 'Delusion and Experience', Mind, Value and Mental Health: Philosophy and Psychiatry Summer School, University of Oxford, UK.