Evan Thompson
Evan Thompson is a Canadian philosopher and cognitive scientist, serving as Professor of Philosophy at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, where he explores the nature of the mind, the self, and human experience through interdisciplinary lenses including cognitive science, philosophy of mind, phenomenology, and Asian philosophical traditions.[1] Thompson's most influential contribution is his co-authorship of The Embodied Mind: Cognitive Science and Human Experience (1991, revised 2016), written with Francisco Varela and Eleanor Rosch, which pioneered the enactive approach to cognition by emphasizing how mind and experience arise through dynamic interactions between organisms and their environments, challenging representationalist models in cognitive science.[2][3] His work has significantly shaped the fields of embodied cognition and enactivism, integrating insights from neuroscience, biology, and phenomenology to argue that cognition is inherently action-oriented and situated.[4] Born in 1962,[5] Thompson earned an A.B. in Asian Studies from Amherst College in 1983 and a Ph.D. in Philosophy from the University of Toronto in 1990.[1] His academic career includes positions as Canada Research Chair in Cognitive Science and the Embodied Mind at York University (2002–2005) and Professor of Philosophy at the University of Toronto (2005–2013), before joining UBC in 2013.[1] He is an elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and served as President of the Pacific Division of the American Philosophical Association in 2021.[1][6] Among his other major publications are Colour Vision: A Study in Cognitive Science and the Philosophy of Perception (1995), Mind in Life: Biology, Phenomenology, and the Sciences of Mind (2007), Waking, Dreaming, Being: Self and Consciousness in Neuroscience, Meditation, and Philosophy (2014), and Why I Am Not a Buddhist (2020), the latter critiquing the secular appropriation of Buddhist ideas in Western science and philosophy.[1] Thompson has also contributed to cross-cultural dialogues on consciousness and meditation, co-directing National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Institutes on these topics in 2012 and 2018, and serving on planning committees for the Mind and Life Institute.[1]Biography
Early Life and Family
Evan Thompson was born in 1962 in Ithaca, New York.[7] He grew up in Boston, New York, and Toronto, within a family deeply engaged in intellectual and cultural pursuits. His parents, Gail Thompson and William Irwin Thompson, were both involved in these endeavors.[1][7] His father, William Irwin Thompson, was a prominent cultural historian, poet, and social philosopher who founded the Lindisfarne Association in the early 1970s as an alternative educational institute and contemplative community aimed at fostering a "new planetary culture" through interdisciplinary dialogue among scientists, artists, and thinkers.[8] This environment profoundly shaped Thompson's upbringing, as he was home-schooled there as a child and teenager during the 1970s, immersing him in discussions that blended Western and Eastern ideas.[8][9] The Lindisfarne setting exposed Thompson from a young age to contemplative practices and global philosophical traditions, sparking his early fascination with Asian studies and philosophy; as a child, he was described as "a little kid gripped by philosophical questions."[9] This familial and communal influence laid the groundwork for his later academic pursuits, leading him to enroll at Amherst College at age 16 to study Asian studies.[9]Education
Evan Thompson earned his A.B. in Asian Studies from Amherst College in 1983.[1] His studies at Amherst were heavily influenced by the scholar Robert Thurman, a professor in the Religion Department, under whom Thompson pursued coursework and early research in Tibetan Buddhism and comparative philosophy, building on his prior exposure to Eastern thought through the Lindisfarne Association community where he was homeschooled.[10][11] Thompson then pursued graduate studies in philosophy at the University of Toronto, where he completed his Ph.D. in 1990.[1] His dissertation, titled Colour Vision and the Comparative Argument: A Case Study in Cognitive Science and the Philosophy of Perception, examined the ontology of color through the interplay of empirical and conceptual levels of explanation in vision science, marking his initial interdisciplinary engagement with cognitive science during his doctoral training.[12][13] This work introduced him to key concepts in philosophy of mind and perception, laying the groundwork for his later explorations at the intersection of phenomenology and cognitive approaches.[14]Academic Career
Early Positions and Affiliations
Following his PhD in philosophy from the University of Toronto in 1990, Evan Thompson undertook a postdoctoral fellowship funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, splitting his time between the University of California, Berkeley's Department of Philosophy and the Center for Cognitive Studies at Tufts University from 1989 to 1991.[15] During this period, he collaborated closely with Daniel Dennett on topics in cognitive science.[15] He then served as a non-tenure-stream assistant professor in the Philosophy Department at the University of Toronto from 1991 to 1992. Thompson subsequently held tenure-stream appointments in philosophy departments at several institutions in the early 1990s and 2000s. From 1992 to 1994, he was at Concordia University in Montreal. He moved to Boston University from 1994 to 1996. In 1996, he joined York University in Toronto, where he received tenure and was promoted to associate professor in 1998, and later to full professor in 2003; he remained affiliated there until 2005. During these early career years, Thompson deepened his collaboration with Francisco Varela at the Centre de Recherche en Épistémologie Appliquée (CREA) at the École Polytechnique in Paris, building on prior work together that laid foundational ideas for enactivism. Their joint projects included developing enactive theories of cognition, culminating in the seminal co-authored book The Embodied Mind: Cognitive Science and Human Experience (MIT Press, 1991), which integrated phenomenology, cognitive science, and Buddhist philosophy. Thompson's initial academic output also featured Colour Vision: A Study in Cognitive Science and the Philosophy of Perception (Routledge, 1995), examining perception through interdisciplinary lenses. At York University, he contributed to cognitive science initiatives as a member of the Centre for Vision Research and secured the Canada Research Chair (Tier 2) in Cognitive Science and the Embodied Mind from 2002 to 2005, supporting his research on embodied cognition.[16]Professorships and Visiting Roles
From 2005 to 2013, Thompson served as Full Professor of Philosophy at the University of Toronto, where he also contributed to leadership in the department and participating in the undergraduate program in cognitive science.[17][14] During this period, he held the Canada Research Chair in Cognitive Science and the Embodied Mind, supporting his work at the intersection of philosophy and neuroscience.[17] Since 2013, Thompson has been Professor of Philosophy at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, where he is affiliated with the Department of Philosophy and contributes to interdisciplinary initiatives in cognitive science and philosophy of mind.[18][19] In recognition of his scholarly impact, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 2013, an honor highlighting his contributions to philosophy and cognitive science.[19][17][20] Thompson has held several visiting appointments that reflect his international collaborations, including positions at the Center for Subjectivity Research at the University of Copenhagen and the Department of Philosophy at the University of Colorado, Boulder.[14][16] These roles have facilitated his engagement with phenomenology and consciousness studies across institutions. Post-2020, he has maintained active involvement through invited lectures, such as a 2023 talk on enacting mindfulness from cognitive science perspectives at the Osher Center for Integrative Health and a 2025 lecture on the subject of time at the Center for Subjectivity Research.[21][22]Philosophical Contributions
Enactivism and Embodied Cognition
Enactivism, as co-developed by Evan Thompson, Francisco Varela, and Eleanor Rosch, posits that cognition arises through the dynamic, reciprocal interactions between an autonomous organism and its environment, rather than through internal representations of an external world.[23] This foundational idea was articulated in their 1991 book The Embodied Mind: Cognitive Science and Human Experience, which introduced enaction as the process by which living beings "bring forth" a world of significance through their sensorimotor engagement.[23] Central to this view is the concept of sense-making, wherein organisms actively enact domains of relevance—termed their Umwelt—by coupling their bodily activities to environmental perturbations in ways that sustain their viability.[24] A core innovation of Thompson's enactivism lies in its critique of representationalism in cognitive science, which treats the mind as a computational system processing symbolic inputs to build internal models of reality.[3] Instead, Thompson argues that cognition is inherently embodied and situated, emerging from the organism's autopoietic organization—the self-maintaining, self-producing dynamics of living systems that ensure operational closure while interacting with the world.[24] Autopoiesis, originally theorized by Humberto Maturana and Varela, provides the biological foundation for this approach, positing that life processes constitute the basis for mind, thereby bridging biology and cognition without reducing the former to the latter.[25] Thompson emphasizes sensorimotor contingencies— the lawful patterns of sensory changes contingent on possible movements—as key to understanding perceptual experience, such as how visual awareness of shape or color depends on active exploration rather than passive retinal images.[26] Over the 1990s and into the 2000s, Thompson evolved enactivism by deepening its integration with biological theory, particularly in his 2007 book Mind in Life: Biology, Phenomenology, and the Sciences of Mind, where he explores the "deep continuity" between life and mind.[24] Here, he extends early formulations by incorporating examples from developmental biology and neurodynamics, such as how neural activity in early visual cortices reflects organism-environment coupling rather than isolated computation, challenging computationalist accounts of perception.[24] This biological emphasis underscores enactivism's rejection of mind-body dualism, framing cognition as an extension of life's adaptive self-regulation, with perceptual experience serving as a prime illustration of enacted sense-making in everyday encounters like navigating space or recognizing objects through movement.[25] Phenomenological descriptions complement these mechanisms by highlighting the first-person dimensions of embodied engagement, though enactivism prioritizes the organism's autonomous agency.[27] More recently, in his 2025 article "Enaction as the Bringing Forth of Worlds," Thompson further elaborates on enaction as a process of world-making, reinforcing the enactive paradigm's implications for cognitive science.[28]Phenomenology, Consciousness, and Contemplative Neuroscience
Evan Thompson has significantly advanced the integration of phenomenological philosophy, particularly the Husserlian tradition, with cognitive science to investigate consciousness through first-person methods. Drawing on Edmund Husserl's emphasis on the lived experience of consciousness, Thompson advocates for a methodological approach that treats subjective reports as essential data alongside objective neuroscientific measures. This integration aims to bridge the explanatory gap between phenomenological descriptions and brain processes by employing disciplined introspective practices, such as the phenomenological epoché—involving suspension of assumptions, redirection of attention, and receptivity—to refine first-person accounts of experience.[29] Central to Thompson's framework is neurophenomenology, a research program he co-developed with Francisco Varela, which combines phenomenological inquiry with neuroscientific experimentation to study the structure of conscious experience. In this approach, first-person methods generate "refined" subjective data that can correlate with third-person brain dynamics, as demonstrated in pilot studies linking meditative states like "Steady Readiness" to specific EEG patterns of phase synchrony. Thompson critiques purely neurocentric views of the mind, arguing that consciousness cannot be reduced to brain activity alone but emerges from the embodied interaction of brain, body, and environment, thereby challenging reductionist models that overlook the dynamic, enactive nature of cognition.[29][29][29] In contemplative neuroscience, Thompson explores how meditation practices transform self-awareness and the sense of self, drawing on empirical studies of long-term meditators to examine alterations in attention, emotion regulation, and phenomenal experience. He highlights meditation's capacity to cultivate meta-awareness, allowing practitioners to observe the flux of mental states without identification, as evidenced by neuroimaging findings of increased gamma-band synchrony during focused attention and open monitoring practices. This work positions contemplative training as a trainable skill for investigating consciousness, fostering a "mutual circulation" between scientific methods and contemplative traditions to deepen understanding of subjective experience.[30][30][30] A key concept in Thompson's analysis is the continuity of consciousness across waking, dreaming, and meditative states, where the self is not a fixed entity but a process unfolding through meta-awareness in each mode. In waking life, selfhood arises through perceptual engagement; in dreaming, it manifests in narrative immersion or lucid recognition; and in meditation, it can dissolve into non-dual awareness, revealing underlying similarities in how experience is structured. This perspective, informed by both Western phenomenology and empirical neuroscience, underscores the fluid boundaries between states and critiques views that privilege waking consciousness as paradigmatic.[31][31] In recent work, including his 2024 article "Daydreaming as Spontaneous Immersive Imagination: A Phenomenological Analysis," Thompson extends this to spontaneous mental states like daydreaming, analyzing their immersive qualities through phenomenological methods.[32] Additionally, in the 2024 co-authored book The Blind Spot: Why Science Cannot Ignore Human Experience, Thompson argues that scientific inquiry must incorporate subjective experience to address fundamental conundrums in physics, biology, and consciousness studies, critiquing scientism's oversight of the human perspective.[33]Cross-Cultural Engagement with Buddhism
Evan Thompson's cross-cultural engagement with Buddhism originated from his early academic training in Asian Studies, where he earned an A.B. from Amherst College in 1983, influenced by formative encounters at the Lindisfarne Association with scholars such as Robert Thurman and Francisco Varela.[1][9] This background led him to integrate key Buddhist philosophical traditions, including Madhyamaka and Abhidharma, with enactivist approaches to cognition. In The Embodied Mind: Cognitive Science and Human Experience (1991), co-authored with Varela and Eleanor Rosch, Thompson draws on Abhidharma's phenomenological analysis of mind as a succession of momentary mental states—distinguishing primary awareness (citta) from associated mental factors (caitasika)—to parallel enactivist models that emphasize embodied, non-representational processes in cognitive science.[34] He further aligns Madhyamaka's doctrine of dependent origination (pratītyasamutpāda), as articulated by Candrakīrti, with enactivism's conception of the self as a dynamic, enacted process arising from interdependent conditions rather than an independent entity.[35] A central aspect of Thompson's critical engagement appears in his book Why I Am Not a Buddhist (2020), where he challenges Buddhist modernism and exceptionalism prevalent in Western appropriations.[36] He argues that portrayals of Buddhism as uniquely compatible with science—often stripping away its ritual, metaphysical, and communal elements to present it as a rational "science of the mind"—are historically recent inventions dating to the 19th century and foster a distorted, ahistorical understanding.[37] Thompson critiques secular adaptations in cognitive science and mindfulness programs, such as Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR), for commodifying meditation while ignoring its embedded ethical frameworks and cultural specificity, thereby creating "looping effects" that alter practices without acknowledging their religious roots.[9] These arguments advocate for a cosmopolitan approach that appreciates Buddhism's insights without exceptionalist claims or reductive secularization. Thompson's cross-cultural projects extend to neurophenomenology, a methodological framework he co-developed with Varela to bridge first-person experiential reports from Buddhist contemplative practices with third-person neuroscientific investigations of meditation-induced states.[38] In this vein, works like Waking, Dreaming, Being: Self and Consciousness in Neuroscience, Meditation, and Philosophy (2014) explore how meditation reveals the processual nature of consciousness, while underscoring philosophical limits to equating subjective experience with neural correlates alone.[1] He emphasizes ethical boundaries in such research, cautioning against cultural insensitivity in studying traditions like Tibetan Buddhism and advocating for collaborative, reciprocal dialogues that respect practitioners' interpretive authority over their experiences.[39] Thompson has advanced these efforts through initiatives such as co-directing National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) Summer Institutes on consciousness and self-knowledge (2012 and 2018), which facilitated interdisciplinary exchanges between Western philosophy, cognitive science, and Asian contemplative traditions.[1] In a 2023 chapter, "What’s in a Concept? Conceptualizing the Nonconceptual in Buddhist Philosophy and Cognitive Science," Thompson further bridges these traditions by examining nonconceptual awareness, integrating Abhidharma concepts with contemporary cognitive theories.[40]Publications
Major Books
Evan Thompson's major books represent key milestones in his development of enactive philosophy, embodied cognition, and interdisciplinary explorations of consciousness and culture. The Embodied Mind: Cognitive Science and Human Experience (1991, co-authored with Francisco J. Varela and Eleanor Rosch; revised edition 2017) provides an overview of the enactivist paradigm, challenging representationalist models in cognitive science by arguing that mind and environment co-emerge through embodied action, drawing on phenomenology, biology, and Buddhist concepts of experience. The book proposes that cognition is not a passive representation of an independent world but an active process shaped by the organism's sensorimotor engagement, marking a foundational shift toward viewing the mind as embodied and situated. It has profoundly influenced cognitive science and philosophy, originating the embodied cognition movement and garnering over 23,000 citations as of November 2025, while inspiring applications in mindfulness practices and neuroscience.[23][41] Colour Vision: A Study in Cognitive Science and the Philosophy of Perception (1995) offers an interdisciplinary analysis of color perception, integrating cognitive science, philosophy, and empirical research to argue for an ecological and enactive approach to vision, challenging traditional representational theories and emphasizing the relational nature of perceptual experience. The book has been influential in philosophy of perception, with over 1,000 citations as of November 2025.[42][43][41] Mind in Life: Biology, Phenomenology, and the Sciences of Mind (2007) advances the enactive continuity between life and mind, contending that cognition emerges from the organizational properties of living systems rather than computational processes in the brain. Thompson uses biological examples, such as cellular autopoiesis and sensorimotor dynamics, to illustrate how mindedness is rooted in the enactive life of organisms, integrating Husserlian phenomenology with contemporary biology to critique dualisms between mind and body or subject and object. The work has been widely received as a landmark in enactive theory, with over 6,800 citations as of November 2025, shaping debates in philosophy of biology and cognitive science by emphasizing the primacy of life for understanding mind.[44][41] Waking, Dreaming, Being: Self and Consciousness in Neuroscience, Meditation, and Philosophy (2014) synthesizes neuroscience, Western philosophy, and contemplative traditions—particularly Advaita Vedanta and Tibetan Buddhism—to examine states of consciousness across waking, dreaming, and deep sleep. Thompson argues that the self is a dynamic process rather than a fixed entity, using empirical studies on sleep and meditation to show how these states reveal the constructed nature of subjective experience and challenge Cartesian notions of a unified self. The book has been praised for its interdisciplinary rigor and accessibility, receiving positive reviews for bridging science and philosophy, and accumulating over 700 citations as of November 2025 in consciousness studies.[45][46][41] Why I Am Not a Buddhist (2020) offers a critical examination of Buddhist modernism in Western thought, rejecting the notion of Buddhism as inherently scientific or exceptional while affirming its philosophical value. Key chapters address the myth of Buddhist exceptionalism (challenging claims of timeless rationality), the truth of Buddhism (distinguishing soteriological goals from empirical verification), the no-self doctrine (contrasting it with neuroscientific views of agency), Buddhism and science (highlighting incompatibilities in methodology), meditation's effects on the mind (based on empirical evidence), and a proposal for cosmopolitanism as a pluralistic alternative drawing from Eastern and Western sources. The book has sparked debate in religious studies and philosophy, with over 500 citations as of November 2025, lauded for its nuanced critique that promotes critical engagement over uncritical adoption.[47][48][41] The Blind Spot: Why Science Cannot Ignore Human Experience (2024, co-authored with Adam Frank and Marcelo Gleiser) critiques the scientistic tendency to exclude subjective experience from scientific inquiry, arguing that phenomena like consciousness, time, and quantum mechanics require integrating human perspective to avoid a "blind spot" in understanding reality. The authors advocate for a reformed scientific worldview that recognizes science as a human endeavor embedded in lived experience, essential for addressing contemporary challenges like climate change and science denial. Early reception highlights its timeliness and interdisciplinary appeal, positioning it as an influential call for humility in science, with over 50 citations as of November 2025.[33][41]Selected Articles and Edited Works
Evan Thompson has authored numerous influential journal articles and book chapters that have shaped debates in enactivism, embodied cognition, phenomenology, and neurophenomenology, often collaborating with key figures in cognitive science and philosophy. His edited volumes similarly serve as foundational resources, compiling interdisciplinary perspectives on perception, consciousness, and the mind. These works emphasize methodological innovations, such as integrating first-person phenomenological accounts with third-person scientific data, and extend enactive theories to contemporary issues like meditation and artificial intelligence. Below are selected examples, prioritized for their high citation impact and role in advancing specific fields.[41]Edited Volumes
- Vision and Mind: Selected Readings in the Philosophy of Perception (2002, co-edited with Alva Noë, MIT Press). This anthology curates seminal papers on enactive and sensorimotor approaches to vision, challenging representationalist views and influencing perceptual philosophy with over 1,200 citations as of November 2025.[41]
- The Cambridge Handbook of Consciousness (2007, co-edited with Philip David Zelazo and Morris Moscovitch, Cambridge University Press). A comprehensive collection of 37 chapters on consciousness from neuroscientific, philosophical, and psychological angles, it has become a standard reference in the field, cited more than 3,500 times as of November 2025 for bridging divides in consciousness studies.[41]
Selected Journal Articles
- "Neurophenomenology: Integrating Subjective Experience and Brain Dynamics in the Neuroscience of Consciousness" (2003, with Antoine Lutz, Trends in Cognitive Sciences, vol. 7, no. 2, pp. 63–69). This seminal article outlines neurophenomenology as a method to combine phenomenological descriptions with neuroscientific data, addressing the "hard problem" of consciousness and garnering over 1,000 citations as of November 2025 for its impact on contemplative neuroscience.[41]
- "Radical Embodiment: Neural Dynamics and Consciousness" (2001, with Francisco J. Varela, Trends in Cognitive Sciences, vol. 5, no. 10, pp. 418–425). Proposing an enactive framework where consciousness arises from organism-environment dynamics rather than isolated brain processes, this piece has been cited over 1,900 times as of November 2025 and foundational to embodied cognition debates.[41]
- "Sensorimotor Subjectivity and the Enactive Approach to Experience" (2005, Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences, vol. 4, no. 3, pp. 407–427). Thompson elucidates how subjectivity emerges through sensorimotor contingencies, advancing enactivism's application to perceptual experience with approximately 600 citations as of November 2025.[41]
- "Making Sense of Sense-Making: Reflections on Enactive and Extended Mind Theories" (2009, with Mog Stapleton, Topoi, vol. 28, no. 1, pp. 23–30). This article critiques and refines enactive sense-making, influencing discussions on extended cognition and cited over 800 times as of November 2025.[41]
- "Does Consciousness Disappear in Dreamless Sleep?" (2016, with Jennifer M. Windt and Tore Nielsen, Trends in Cognitive Sciences, vol. 20, no. 4, pp. 231–242). Challenging assumptions about consciousness in non-REM sleep through phenomenological and neuroscientific analysis, it has shaped contemplative neuroscience with over 400 citations as of November 2025.[41]
- "LLMs Don't Know Anything: Reply to Yildirim and Paul" (2024, with Mariel K. Goddu and Alva Noë, Trends in Cognitive Sciences, vol. 28, no. 11, pp. 963–964). Responding to claims about large language models' understanding, this piece applies enactivism to AI, critiquing disembodied cognition and emerging as influential in philosophy of AI debates.[41]
- "Daydreaming as Spontaneous Immersive Imagination: A Phenomenological and Enactive Analysis" (2024, with Emily Lawson, Philosophy and the Mind Sciences, vol. 5). Exploring daydreaming through enactive lenses, it connects spontaneous thought to embodied experience, contributing to ongoing discussions in cognitive phenomenology.[41]
Selected Book Chapters
- "The Enactive Approach" (2014, with Ezequiel A. Di Paolo, in The Routledge Handbook of Embodied Cognition, Routledge, pp. 32–42; revised 2024 edition). This chapter synthesizes enaction as a paradigm for understanding life and mind, with the 2024 update addressing recent developments in autopoiesis and cited over 600 times across editions as of November 2025 for its role in embodied cognition.[41]