Her other professional experience includes being a radio producer, editor and broadcaster for the Israel IDF radio station, a television writer and host in Israel, and a Hebrew television newscaster and interviewer for Channel 18 in Los Angeles.[6] Bar-On also formerly served as the President of MYCO@UNC, a youth chamber organization, from 2009 to 2012.[6]
Research
In Speaking My Mind: Expression and Self-Knowledge, published by Oxford University Press, Bar-On investigates the problem of self-knowledge in relation to questions of expression and expressive behavior.[14][15] She draws on historical figures including Wittgenstein and Darwin to develop a neo-expressivist view of first-personal expressive utterances which explains how these utterances differ epistemically from non-expressive utterances while sharing the same semantic structure.[16]Speaking My Mind has been praised[by whom?] as "a rich book; rich in topics, in argumentation, and in philosophical imagination and insight. It deserves the attention of all who work in mind and language."[17] In subsequent work, Bar-On has applied this neo-expressivist framework to additional problems in the philosophy of language, metaethics, and epistemology.[18][19] More recently, Bar-On has sought to illuminate the nature of human communication by situating it in relation to animal expressive communication more broadly, and thereby to show how human linguistic meaning can be understood consistently with a naturalistic theory of the world.[20][21][22]
Selected publications
Speaking My Mind: Expression and Self-Knowledge (Oxford University Press, 2004)
Expression and Self-Knowledge (co-authored with Crispin Wright) (Wiley-Blackwell, 2023)
“First-Person Authority: Dualism, Constitutivism, and Neo-Expressivism” Erkenntnis 2009
“The Use of Force Against Deflationism: Assertion and Truth”, (with Keith Simmons) in Truth and Speech Acts: Studies in the Philosophy of Language, Greimann and Siegwart, eds., Routledge, 2007, 61–89.
“Deflationism”, (with Keith Simmons) in Oxford Handbook in Philosophy of Language, Ernie LePore, ed., Oxford University Press, 2006, 607–630. ISBN978-0-19-925941-0.
^Kasher, Asa and Shalom Lapids (eds.), translated by Dorit Bar-On (1982). Modern Trends in Philosophy, Vol.1. Yachdav.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Kasher, Asa, and Shalom Lapin (eds.), translated by Dorit Bar-On (1985). Modern Trends in Philosophy, Vol. 2. Yachdav.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Murdoch, Iris, translated by Dorit Bar-On (1982). The Nice and the Good. Tel Aviv: Zmora, Bitan, Modan.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Vonnegut, Kurt, translated by Dorit Bar-On (1983). Breakfast of Champions. Tel Aviv: Zmora Bitan.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Cummings, E. E.; Bar-On, Dorit (translator) (1979). "Translation of E. E. Cummings poems". Achsav ("Now"). 39–40. {{cite journal}}: |last2= has generic name (help)
^Richardson, Dorothy, translated by Dorit Bar-On (1978). Pilgrimage. Achshav, Vol 37-38.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Bar-On, Dorit (2011). "Externalism and Skepticism: Recognition, Expression, and Self-Knowledge", Self-Knowledge and the Self, A. Coliva, ed., Oxford UP, 2011. Oxford. ISBN978-0415926904.
^Bar-On, Dorit and M. Priselac (2011). "Triangulation and the Beasts." In Triangulation: from an Epistemological Point of View, C. Amoretti and G. Preyer (eds.). Ontos Verlag. ISBN978-3868381191.