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2024    Andrews, K., Fitzpatrick, S., Westra, E. Human and nonhuman norms: A dimensional framework. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2023.0026

2024    Westra, E.,, Fitzpatrick, S., Brosnan, S.F., Gruber, T., Hobaiter, C., Hopper, L.M., Kelly, D., Krupenye, C., Luncz, L.V., Theriault, J. Andrews, K. In search of animal normativity: A framework for studying social norms in nonhuman animals. Biological Reviews.  https://doi.org/10.1111/brv.13056

2024    “All animals are conscious”: Shifting the null hypothesis in consciousness science. Mind & Language. https://doi.org/10.1111/mila.12498

2023    What is it like to be a crab? Aeon

2023 Consciousness beyond the human case LeDoux, J., Birch, J., Andrews, K., Clayton, N. S., Daw, N. D., Frith, C., Lau, H., Peters, M. A. K., Schneider, S., Seth, A., Suddendorf, T., & Vandekerckhove, M. M. P. (2023). Current Biology, 33(16), R832–R840.

2023  Humans, the norm breakers Commentary on Kumar and Campbell’s A Better Ape. Biology & Philosophy 38, 35. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10539-023-09918-w.

2023 Rule-ish patterns in the psychology of norms with Evan Westra. Commentary on Heyes “Rethinking norm psychology” Perspectives on Psychological Science.

2023 What has feelings? K. Andrews & J. Birch, Aeon

2022 How mindshaping and social maintenance can support shared intentions in great apes with Dennis Papadopoulos. HUMANA.MENTE Journal of Philosophical Studies15(42), 205-223.

2022 A pluralistic framework for the psychology of norms with Evan Westra. Biology & Philosophy 37, 40.

2022 Animal culture meets animal welfare with Simon Fitzpatrick. The Journal of the Philosophy of Science 89(5), 1104-1113. 

2022 Does the sentience framework imply all animals are conscious? Commentary on Crump et al. “Sentience in decapod crustaceans: A general framework and review of the evidence”, Animal Sentience 32(17).

2022 The hidden world of octopus cities and cultures shows why it’s wrong to farm them The Conversation Canada.

2022 Animal moral psychologies with Susana Monsó. John Doris and Manuel Vargas, eds. The Moral Psychology Handbook. Second Edition. Oxford: University Press.

2022 The question of animal emotions with Frans de Waal. Science 375(6587), 1351-1352.

2021 If skill is normative, then norms are everywhere with Evan Westra. Analyse & Kritik 43(1), 203-218 (2021). 

2020 What we miss when we overlook animal culture EurSafe Newsletter 22(1).

2020 Rats are us. K. Andrews & S. Monsó. Aeon.

2020 How To Study Animal Minds. Cambridge University Press, Elements in The Philosophy of Biology Series.

2020 The Animal Mind: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Animal Minds Second edition. Routledge.

2020 Folk psychology: Pluralistic approaches with Shannon Spaulding and Evan Westra. Introduction to special issue of Synthese.

2020 Naïve normativity: The social foundation of moral cognition  Journal of the American Philosophical Association 6(1), 35-56.

2020 Ethical implications of animal personhood and the role for science Etica & Politica / Ethics & Politics, XXII(1), 13-32.

2020 Belief and representation in nonhuman animals. With Sarah Beth Lesson and Brandon Tinklenberg. In Paco Calvo, Sarah Robins, and John Symons, eds. Routledge Companion to the Philosophy of Psychology, Second edition.

2018 Normative practices of other animals with Sarah Vincent and Rebecca Ring. In Karen Jones, Mark Timmons and Aaron Zimmerman, eds. The Routledge Handbook of Moral Epistemology. New York: Routledge, 57-83.

2018 Chimpanzee Rights: The Philosophers’ Brief with Gary L Comstock, Crozier G.K.D., Sue Donaldson, Andrew Fenton , Tyler M. John, L. Syd M Johnson, Robert C. Jones, Will Kymlica, Letitia Meynell, Nathan Nobis, David M. Peña-Guzmán, Jeff Sebo with an introduction by Lori Gruen and an afterword by Steve Wise.
Routledge.

2018 Animal minds The Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy on-line

2018 Mind. In Lori Gruen, ed. Critical Terms in Animal Studies. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 234-250. 2018.

2018 Do apes attribute beliefs to predict behavior? A Mengzian social intelligence hypothesis. The Harvard Review of Philosophy. 25:89-110. 2018.

2018 Apes track false beliefs but might not understand them. Learning and Behavior. 46(1): 3-4.

2018 Amicus Brief for the Nonhuman Rights Project with Gary Comstock, G.K.D. Crozier, Sue Donaldson, Andrew Fenton, Tyler John, Syd M Johnson, Robert Jones, Will Kymlicka, Letitia Meynell, Nathan Nobis, David Peña-Guzmán, James Rocha, Bernard Rollin, Jeffrey Sebo, Adam Shriver, Rebecca Walker. 2018.

2018 Chicken minds and moral standing. Commentary on Marino on “thinking chickens.” Animal Sentience. 17(14). 2018.

2017 Do chimpanzees reason about belief? In Kristin Andrews and Jacob Beck, eds. The Routledge Handbook of the Philosophy of Animal Minds. New York: Routledge, 258-268.

2017 The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Animal Minds Kristin Andrews and Jacob Beck, eds. Routledge.

2017 Chimpanzee mindreading: Don’t stop believing. Philosophy Compass. 12(1) e12394.

2017 Pluralistic folk psychology in humans and other animals. In Julian Kiverstein, ed. The Routledge Handbook of the Social Mind.New York: Routledge, 117-138. 2017.

2017 More stereotypes, please! The limits of ‘theory of mind’ and the need for further studies on complexity of real world social interaction. Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 40:e2.

2017 Cow persons? How to find out. Commentary on Marino and King. Animal Behavior and Cognition. 4(4) 499-501. 2017.

2017 Life in a cage. The Philosopher’s Magazine. 76:72-77.

2016 A role for folk psychology in animal cognition research. In Andreas Blank, ed. Animals: Basic Philosophical Concepts. Philosophia: Munich, 205-22. 2016.

2016 Snipping or Editing? Parsimony in the Chimpanzee Mindreading Debate. Symposium on Elliott Sober’s book Ockham’s Razors. Metascience. 25 (3):377-386. 2016.

2016 The Psychological Concept of ‘Person’. Commentary on Rowlands on Animal Personhood. Animal Sentience. 10(17). 2016.

2016 How to tell what animals think and feel. Book review of Beyond Words: What Animals Think and Feel by Carl Safina. BioScience. 66(7): 614-616. 2016.

2016 Book of the week book review of Voracious Science and Vulnerable Animals: A Primate Scientist’s Ethical Journey, by John P. Gluck. Times Higher Education. November 3, 2016.

2016 Pluralistic folk psychology and varieties of self-knowledge: an exploration. Philosophical Explorations18(2), 282–296. 2016.

2015 The Animal Mind. An Introduction to the Philosophy of Animal Cognition.Routledge, 2015

2015 The folk psychology spiral. Southern Journal of Philosophy. 53(S1): 50-67. 2015.

2015 Pluralistic folk psychology and varieties of self-knowledge.Philosophical Explorations. 18(2): 282-296. 2015.

2014 Ready to teach or ready to learn: A critique of the natural pedagogy theory. With Hisashi Nakao. Review of Philosophy and Psychology5(4), 465–483. 2014.  

2014 Normativity and Pluralistic Folk Psychology. 5 articles on folk psychology for The Brains Blog. 2014.

2014 Anthropomorphism, Anthropectomy, and the Null Hypothesis. With Brian Huss. Biology and Philosophy. 29(5): 711-729. 2014.

2013 Assumptions in Animal Cognition Research. With Brian Huss. Hisashi Nakao, ed. CAPE Studies in Applied Philosophy and Ethics Series (2013), 1: 152-162.

2013 Ape Autonomy? Social Norms in Other Species. In Klaus Petrus and Markus Wild, eds. Animal Minds and Animal Ethics. Bielefeld: Transcript,173-196.

2013 Are Apes’ Responses to Pointing Gestures Intentional? With Olivia Sultanescu. Humana. Mente Journal of Philosophical Studies. Special Issue Pointing: Where Embodied Cognition Meets the Symbolic Mind.(24): 53-77.

2013 It’s Like He’s Thinking or Something. In John Huss, ed. Planet of the Apes and Philosophy. Chicago: Open Court Books, 3-14.

2013 Great Ape Mindreading: What’s at Stake? In Annette Lanjouw and Raymond Corbey, eds. The Politics of Species: Reshaping our Relationships with Other Animals. Cambridge: University Press, 115-125.

2013 “Animal Cognition”  With Ljiljana Radenovic. International Encyclopedia of Ethics, Hugh LaFollette, Sarah Stroud, and John Deigh, eds. Wiley-Blackwell,.

2013 “Folk Psychology” Encyclopedia of Philosophy and the Social Sciences, Byron Kaldis, ed. Sage,.

2012 Do Apes Read Minds? Toward a New Folk Psychology MIT Press.

2012 Confronting Language, Representation, and Belief: A Limited Defense of Mental Continuity. With Ljiljana Radenovic. In Jennifer Vonk and Todd Shackelford, eds. The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Evolutionary Psychology. Oxford: University Press, 39-60.

2011 Beyond Anthropomorphism: Attributing Psychological Properties to Animals. In Tom Beauchamp and R.G. Frey, eds. The Oxford Handbook of Animal Ethics. Oxford: University Press, 469-494.

2011 Pantomime in Great Apes: Evidence and Implications. With Anne Russon. Communicative and Integrative Biology. 4(3): 315-317.

2011 Orangutan Pantomime: Elaborating the Message. With Anne Russon. Biology Letters. 7(4): 627-30.

2011 Social Knowledge. With Keith Jensen, Joan B. Silk, Redouan Bshary, Dorthy L. Cheney, Nathan Emery, Charlotte K. Hemelrijk, Kay Holekamp, Derek C. Penn, Josef Perner, and Christoph Teufel. In Randolf Menzel and Julia Fischer, eds. Animal Thinking: Contemporary Issues in Comparative Cognition (Strüngmann Forum Reports). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 267-292.

2009 Telling tales. Philosophical Psychology22(2), 227–235. 2009. (Review article on Dan Hutto's book Folk Psychological Narratives)

2009 Understanding norms without a theory of mind. Inquiry. 52(5): 433-448.

2009 Telling Stories Without Words.Journal of Consciousness Studies. 16(6-8): 268-288.

2008 “Animal Cognition” Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. First edition. Edward N. Zalta (ed.)

2008 It's in Your Nature: A Pluralistic Folk Psychology. Synthese. 165(1): 13-29.

2008 Interpreting the Baboon. Trends in Cognitive Science. 12(1): 5-6.

2007 Critter psychology: On the possibility of nonhuman animal folk psychology. In Daniel D. Hutto & Matthew Ratcliffe, eds. Folk Psychology Re-Assessed.New York: Springer, 191-210.

2007 Innovation and the Grain Problem. With Anne Russon and Brian Huss. Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 30(4): 422-423.

2006 Speaking Without Interpreting: A Reply to Bouma on Autism and Davidsonian Interpretation. With Ljiljana Radenovic. Philosophical Psychology. 19(5): 663-678:

2005 Chimpanzee Theory of Mind: Looking in All the Wrong Places.Mind and Language. 20(5): 521–536. 2005.

2004 How to Learn from Our Mistakes: Explanation and Moral Justification. Philosophical Explorations.7(3): 247-264. 2004.

2003 Why Bush Should Explain 11 September. In Patrick Hayden, Tom Lansford, and Robert P. Watson, eds. America's War on Terror. Burlington: Ashgate Publishing, 29-42. 2003.

2003 Knowing Mental States: The Asymmetry of Psychological Prediction and Explanation. In Quentin Smith and Aleksander Jokic, eds. Consciousness: New Philosophical Perspectives.Oxford: Oxford University Press, 201-219. 2003.

2002 Interpreting Autism: A Critique of Davidson on Thought and Language.Philosophical Psychology. 15(3): 317-332. 2002.

2000 Our Understanding of Other Minds: Theory of Mind and the Intentional Stance. Journal of Consciousness Studies. (7)7: 12-24. 2000.

ND Does explanation precede prediction in false belief understanding? With Peter Verbeek. Unpublished.

1999 Is theory of mind in young children associated with peer interaction? With Peter Verbeek. Unpublished data presented at The International Society for Human Ethology. 1999.

1996 The First Step in the Case for Great Ape Equality: The Argument for Other Minds. Special issue devoted to The Great Ape Project. Etica & Animali. 8: 131-141. 1996.