Research:
On pain:
Gligorov, N. (2025). Eliminativism Redux: Are Quotidian Pains Hurting Science?. Erkenntnis.
Gligorov, N. (2018). Telling the Truth about Pain: Informed Consent and the Role of Expectation in Pain Intensity. AJOB Neuroscience, 9(3): 173-182.
Gligorov, N. (2017). Don’t Worry, This Will Only Hurt a Bit: The Role of Expectation and Attention in Pain Intensity. The Monist, 100(4): 501–513.
Gligorov, N. (2016). Objectifying Pain, in Neuroethics and the Scientific Revision of Common Sense. Studies in Brain and Mind (Volume 11). Springer.
On brain death:
Gligorov, N. (2023). Is Death Irreversible? Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 48(5): 492–503.
Gligorov, N. (2016). A Defense of Brain Death. Neuroethics, 9(2): 119-127.
Gligorov, N. (2016). Identifying Death, in Neuroethics and the Scientific Revision of Common Sense. Studies in Brain and Mind (Volume 11). Springer.
On the continuity of self through time:
Gligorov, N. & Cowan, E. (2025). The Role of Identity Crises in Addiction and Recovery. Journal of Applied Philosophy.
Gligorov, N. (2023), What is an Identity Crisis? Journal of Consciousness Studies, 30 (3-4): 34-58.
Gligorov, N. & Langston, C. (2021) Do You Remember Who You Are? The Pillars of Personal Identity in Dementia, in Living with Dementia, eds: Veljko Dubljević and Frances Bottenberg, 39-54. Advances in Neuroethics. Cham: Springer.
Gligorov, N. & Vitrano, C. (2011). The Impact of Personal Identity on Advance Directives. Journal of Value Inquiry, 45(2): 147-158.
On the relationship between commonsense and science:
Gligorov, N. (2018). The Cognitive Basis of Commonsense Morality. Journal of Cognitive Enhancement, 2(4), 369-376.
Gligorov, N. (2016). Neuroethics and the Scientific Revision of Common Sense. Studies in Brain and Mind (Volume 11). Springer. (Reviewed by L. Syd M. Johnson in NDPR.)