•  190
    The Croce‐Collingwood Theory as Theory
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 61 (2): 171-193. 2003.
  •  83
    Quine: Underdetermination and Naturalistic Metaphysics
    Philosophical Topics 43 (1-2): 179-188. 2015.
    Quine’s naturalism has no room for a point of view outside science from which one might criticize science, or a transcendental point of view from which one could ask questions about the adequacy of science with respect to reality (‘as it is in itself ’). Adrian Moore sniffs out some genuine tensions in this, arguing in effect that Quine is forced by his own views to admit those sorts of questions as legitimate. I venture that Quine, even if he would grant that the posing of such questions is an …Read more
  •  114
    Propositions and reasoning in Russell and Frege
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 79 (3). 1998.
    Both Russell and Frege were inclined to think that there is nothing essentially linguistic about thought: any actual reliance of ours upon language is a mere psychological contingency. If so then it should be possible to formulate logic in such a way that logical relationships are not represented or expressed as principles pertaining to linguistic forms. Russell and Frege take pains to achieve this, but fail. I explain this by looking at some features of Grundgesetz and Principia . Their failure…Read more
  •  103
    Disquotationalism and Expressiveness
    Journal of Philosophical Logic 34 (3): 327-332. 2005.
  •  117
    Quine and His Place in History (edited book)
    Palgrave. 2014.
    Containing three previously unpublished papers by W.V. Quine as well as historical, exegetical, and critical papers by several leading Quine scholars including Hylton, Ebbs, and Ben-Menahem, this volume aims to remedy the comparative lack of historical investigation of Quine and his philosophical context.
  •  161
    The Routledge companion to aesthetics
    British Journal of Aesthetics 42 (3): 323-327. 2002.
  •  329
    Reply to Heck on meaning and truth-conditions
    Philosophical Quarterly 52 (207): 233-236. 2002.
    Richard Heck has contested my argument that the equation of the meaning of a sentence with its truth-condition implies deflationism, on the ground that the argument does not go through if truth-conditions are understood, in Davidson's style, to be stated by T-sentences. My reply is that Davidsonian theories of meaning do not equate the meaning of a sentence with its truth-condition, and thus that Heck's point does not actually obstruct my argument
  •  182
    Quine: The challenge of naturalism
    European Journal of Philosophy 18 (2): 283-295. 2010.
    Glock’s book is about evenly divided between Quine and Davidson. The central claims are (i) that they are best studied in conjunction; (ii) that they ‘can profitably be seen as logical pragmatists’ (meaning primarily that they view language as action that can be understood or clarified by means of formal logic); (iii) that they ‘combine profound insights with serious distortions’; and (iv) that their respective attempts to ‘accommodate higher phenomena such as meaning and thought within a natura…Read more
  •  84
    Philosophy as Fiction: Self, Deception, and Knowledge in Proust (review)
    Philosophy and Literature 29 (2): 498-500. 2005.
    Landy’s book (OUP 2004; 255 pp.+ x) delivers what has gone long and scandalously missing: a philosophical analysis of Proust’s incomparable book that is muscular, concise, philosophically informed and sophisticated; logically rigorous, explanatorily fruitful, and meticulously answerable to its data, namely the text. The philosophy here is not, as often the case in writing about Proust, mere rhetoric or window-dressing, but substantive and literally believable. The book should for a long time be …Read more
  •  124
    Book review. Realistic rationalism Jerrold Katz (review)
    Mind 110 (438): 488-491. 2001.
  •  167
    Philosophy of language explores some of the fundamental yet most technical problems in philosophy, such as meaning and reference, semantics, and propositional attitudes. Some of its greatest exponents, including Gottlob Frege, Ludwig Wittgenstein and Bertrand Russell are amongst the major figures in the history of philosophy. In this clear and carefully structured introduction to the subject Gary Kemp explains the following key topics: the basic nature of philosophy of language and its historica…Read more
  •  39
    Critical Thinking: A Concise Guide
    with T. Bowell
    Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 65 (4): 788-789. 2001.
  •  26
    'The Domain of Images' by James Elkins
    British Journal of Aesthetics 40 (3): 400-402. 2000.
  •  199
    Gary Kemp presents a penetrating investigation of key issues in the philosophy of language, by means of a comparative study of two great figures of late twentieth-century philosophy. He reveals unexplored tensions between the views of Quine and Davidson, and presents a powerful argument in favour of Quine and methodological naturalism.
  •  123
    Proust on art and the value of living
    European Journal of Philosophy 15 (2). 2007.
    No abstract available
  •  67
    Davidson, Quine, and Our Knowledge of the External World
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 73 (1): 44-62. 1992.
  •  71
    6 Assertion as a practice
    In Dirk Greimann & Geo Siegwart (eds.), Truth and Speech Acts: Studies in the Philosophy of Language, Routledge. pp. 5--106. 2012.
  •  163
    The status of expressive content
    British Journal of Aesthetics 35 (2): 121-133. 1995.
  •  47
    Introduction
    with Christopher Belshaw
    In Christopher Belshaw & Gary Kemp (eds.), 12 Modern Philosophers, Wiley-blackwell. 2010.
    This chapter contains sections titled: The Past The Present Metaphysics, Epistemology, and Philosophy of Mind Ethics Philosophy and Culture.
  •  98
    Willard Van Orman Quine is one of the most influential analytic philosophers of the latter half of the twentieth century.
  •  183
    Meaning and truth-conditions
    Philosophical Quarterly 48 (193): 483-493. 1998.
  •  84
    Croce's aesthetics
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. forthcoming.
  •  74
    Pictorial representation is one of the core questions in aesthetics and philosophy of art. What is a picture? How do pictures represent things? This collection of specially commissioned chapters examines the influential thesis that the core of pictorial representation is not resemblance but 'seeing-in', in particular as found in the work of Richard Wollheim. We can see a passing cloud _as_ a rabbit, but we also see a rabbit _in_ the clouds. 'Seeing-in' is an imaginative act of the kind employed …Read more
  •  261
    Museums and their practices—especially those involving collection, curation and exhibition—generate a host of philosophical questions. Such questions are not limited to the domains of ethics and aesthetics, but go further into the domains of metaphysics, epistemology and philosophy of religion. Despite the prominence of museums as public institutions, they have until recently received surprisingly little scrutiny from philosophers in the Anglo-American tradition. By bringing together contributio…Read more
  • Western philosophy since Descartes has been marked by certain seminal books whose concern is the nature and scope of human knowledge. After Descartes Meditations, works by Locke, Berkeley, Hume and Kant are perhaps the most familiar and enduringly influential examples. Quine’s Word and Object (1960) does not conspicuously announce itself as a successor to these, but that is very much what it is. And after Wittgenstein’s Philosophical Investigations, it is amongst the most likely of the philosoph…Read more
  •  131
    Philosophies of art and beauty
    British Journal of Aesthetics 42 (1): 95-97. 2002.
  •  28
    Did Wittgenstein have a Theory of Colour?
    In Frederik A. Gierlinger & Stefan Riegelnik (eds.), Wittgenstein on Colour, De Gruyter. pp. 57-66. 2014.
  •  132
    Beauty and language
    British Journal of Aesthetics 47 (3): 258-267. 2007.
    I argue against Hume and Kant, who maintain that ‘beauty’ expresses a state of the subject, rather than describes features of the object. The word ‘beauty’ is far from being alone in having an expressive dimension, and that which it has falls short of individuating it semantically. Instead, I propose a theory of linguistic idealism with respect to ‘beauty’