• Anaphorically unrestricted quantifiers and paradoxes
    In J. C. Beall & Bradley P. Armour-Garb (eds.), Deflationism and Paradox, Clarendon Press. 2005.
  •  13
    A study is undertaken of folk-psychological language and concepts, the psychological concepts that have developed out of folk psychology and the relationship of this language and concepts to introspection and the cognitive sciences. The background questions explored in the book are: How much does introspection contribute to our understanding of ourselves? Can we rely on folk psychology or on the more sophisticated psychological concepts that have developed from folk psychology to successfully ch…Read more
  •  13
    _Knowledge and Reference in Empirical Science_ is a fascinating study of the bounds between science and language: in what sense, and of what, does science provide knowledge? Is science an instrument only distantly related to what's real? Can the language of science be used to adequately describe the truth? In this book, Jodi Azziouni investigates the technology of science - the actual forging and exploiting of causal links, between ourselves and what we endeavor to know and understand.
  •  17
    The Implicature View of Ontological Commitments and Denials
    In Xavier de Donato-Rodríguez, José L. Falguera & Concha Martínez-Vidal (eds.), Deflationist Conceptions of Abstract Objects, Springer Nature Switzerland. pp. 311-339. 2025.
    It is shown that we express ontological commitments in English purely by means of Gricean implicatures. That is, when we commit ourselves to the existence of bears as we do in conversation when we assert “There are bears,” or “Bears exist,” this is not because of the meaning (the semantics) of the phrase “there is” nor of the word “exist.” Rather it is because the sentences in which these words appear often exhibit implicatures that speakers and their audience experience as the assertion of onto…Read more
  •  25
    The Debate Between Carnap and Quine?
    In Darren Bradley (ed.), Philosophical Methodology After Carnap, Springer. pp. 69-140. 2025.
    Several disagreements between Carnap and Quine remain live: Descendant positions resembling the opposing stances that Carnap and Quine took on several issues are still debated. One dispute is over ontological disagreement. Positions like those of Carnap and Quine’s are playing out in the quantifier-variance literature. The disagreement over analyticity also remains live. The historical point made in this paper: The real dispute between Carnap and Quine is about how artificial languages are to be…Read more
  •  190
    Use and mention with respect to ``know”, “believe”, “evidence”, “justification”, “hypothesis”, and so on: A hot mess
    The Baltic International Yearbook of Cognition, Logic and Communication 16 (1): 1-70. 2025.
    Use/mention errors are everywhere in epistemology. They even show up in Gettier’s classic paper. They bedevil philosophical attempts to understand “know”, “belief”, as well as propositional-attitude expressions at the most basic level. What, for example, are propositional-attitudes attitudes towards? Not towards propositions, as it turns out. Use/mention errors confuse philosophers in the most simple of ways: For example, they allow philosophers to think that evidence and knowledge are propositi…Read more
  •  48
    Tracking Reason: Proof, Consequence, and Truth
    Oxford University Press USA. 2005.
    When ordinary people--mathematicians among them--take something to follow (deductively) from something else, they are exposing the backbone of our self-ascribed ability to reason. Jody Azzouni investigates the connection between that ordinary notion of consequence and the formal analogues invented by logicians. One claim of the book is that, despite our apparent intuitive grasp of consequence, we do not introspect rules by which we reason, nor do we grasp the scope and range of the domain, as it…Read more
  •  33
    Ordinary people - mathematicians among them - grasp when they take something to follow (deductively) from something else. This is the backbone of our self-ascribed ability to reason. This book investigates the connection between that ordinary notion of consequence and the formal analogues developed by logicians.
  • Anaphorically unrestricted quantifiers and paradoxes
    In J. C. Beall & Bradley Armour-Garb (eds.), Deflationism and Paradox, Oxford University Press. 2008.
  •  35
    We talk about what doesn't exist. We say: "Mickey Mouse was invented by Walt Disney," and if we say this, we've said something true. But if something doesn't exist, it has no properties. (What, after all, is it that's supposed to have properties?) How, then, can anything we say be true (or false) of such things? This is the old problem of nonbeing, dating back to Plato and before. This original book shows the ways in which the true and the false are broader than what there is. It shows how what …Read more
  • On "On what there is"
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 79 (1): 1-18. 2002.
    All sides in the recent debates over the Quine‐Putnam Indispensability thesis presuppose Quine's criterion for determining what a discourse is ontologically committed to. I subject the criterion to scrutiny, especially in regard to the available competitor‐criteria, asking what means of evaluation there are for comparing alternative criteria against each other. Finding none, the paper concludes that ontological questions, in a certain sense, are philosophically indeterminate.
  •  3
    Truth and Convention†
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 71 (2): 81-102. 2017.
  •  25
    Standing on Common Ground
    Journal of Philosophy 102 (10): 532-544. 2005.
  •  68
    If we take mathematical statements to be true, then must we also believe in the existence of invisible mathematical objects, accessible only by the power of thought? Jody Azzouni says we do not have to, and claims that the way to escape such a commitment is to accept - as an essential part of scientific doctrine - true statements which are 'about' objects which don't exist in any real sense.
  •  46
    Philosophical reasoning in ordinary language is subject to inference traps. There are several philosophical responses to such traps: mysticism (language and our senses, etc., are metaphysically misleading. We need mystical insight); the modern approach of deserting natural languages for artificial ones; that of cleaning up natural-language reasoning on an ad hoc basis; and the “it’s all good” approach—run with the reasoning as our ways of speaking seem to allow. An extended analysis of Markus Ga…Read more
  •  53
    De Minimis Risk: A Proposal for a New Category of Research Risk
    with Arnulf Zweig, Brett Trusko, Rhoda Sperling, Abraham Schwab, Henry S. Sacks, Lynne D. Richardson, Matthew E. Rhodes, Sean Philpott, Daniel A. Moros, Douglas P. Lackey, Ethylin Wang Jabs, Debbie Indyk, Ian Holzman, Rochelle Hirschhorn, Kurt Hirschhorn, Joseph Goldfarb, Nada Gligorov, Lily Frank, William J. Earle, Joseph W. Dauben, Barbara Brenner, Martin J. Blaser, Keith Benkov, Stefan Bernard Baumrin, and Rosamond Rhodes
    American Journal of Bioethics 11 (11): 1-7. 2011.
    In this article the authors reflect on regulations which have been developed to protect research subjects and data in research which uses human subjects. They suggest that regulations related to informed consent and privacy protection are burdensome in research which uses human subjects. They argue that a new category of research risk must be established which informs research subjects of the level of risk that they will be exposed to by participating in the research.
  •  1
    _Knowledge and Reference in Empirical Science_ is a fascinating study of the bounds between science and language: in what sense, and of what, does science provide knowledge? Is science an instrument only distantly related to what's real? Can the language of science be used to adequately describe the truth? In this book, Jody Azziouni investigates the technology of science - the actual forging and exploiting of causal links, between ourselves and what we endeavor to know and understand.
  • _Knowledge and Reference in Empirical Science_ is a fascinating study of the bounds between science and language: in what sense, and of what, does science provide knowledge? Is science an instrument only distantly related to what's real? Can the language of science be used to adequately describe the truth? In this book, Jodi Azziouni investigates the technology of science - the actual forging and exploiting of causal links, between ourselves and what we endeavor to know and understand.
  •  25
    Can Quine’s criterion for ontological commitment be comparatively applied across different logics? If so, how? Cross-logical evaluations of discourses are central to contemporary philosophy of mathematics and metaphysics. The focus here is on the influential and important arguments of George Boolos and David Lewis that second-order logic and plural quantification don’t incur additional ontological commitments over and above those incurred by first-order quantifiers. These arguments are challenge…Read more
  •  19
    Two more isolated rule-following Robinson Crusoes are discussed. Crusoe 4 still recognizes himself to be speaking a disposition-meaning language because he has introspective access to the dispositions that generate his meaning-urges. But because those dispositions change relatively continuously, he cannot think of himself as speaking distinct languages. Instead, he thinks of his language as one in which he has better and worse dispositions at different times. Crusoe 5, however, has no or little …Read more
  •  8
    A summary of the entire book is given. Apart from descriptions of the contents of each chapter, several additional methodological points are made. I give reasons to avoid, as tools of philosophical analysis, concepts such as “understanding,” “meaning,” and “fact.” I also describe some significant differences between how I understand rule following and how Kripke does. In particular (and this is a difference between my approach and that of most philosophers concerned with this topic), I focus ver…Read more
  •  36
    Starting-point epistemology (SPE) is a new position that, coupled with agent-centered rationality, is the key to resolving philosophical scepticism. SPE acknowledges that metacognitively-sophisticated agents know that they know things and know (something) about the methods by which this happens. Agent-centered rationality implies that a metacognitively-sophisticated agent should only desert a knowledge claim because of a challenge they recognize to be fatal to that claim. Scepticism is metacogni…Read more
  •  17
    Benacerraf’s problem is justly famous. It’s had a major influence on the philosophy of mathematics right from its initial appearance, an influence that continues up through the present moment.
  •  58
    The Algorithmic-Device View of Informal Rigorous Mathematical Proof
    Handbook of the History and Philosophy of Mathematical Practice 2179-2260. forthcoming.
    A new approach to informal rigorous mathematical proof is offered. To this end, algorithmic devices are characterized and their central role in mathematical proof delineated. It is then shown how all the puzzling aspects of mathematical proof, including its peculiar capacity to convince its practitioners, are explained by algorithmic devices. Diagrammatic reasoning is also characterized in terms of algorithmic devices, and the algorithmic device view of mathematical proof is compared to alternat…Read more
  • Nominalism in mathematics
    In A. R. J. Fisher & Anna-Sofia Maurin (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Properties, Routledge. 2024.
  •  51
    Smith, Smith and Seth, and Newton on “Taking to Be True”
    In Marius Stan & Christopher Smeenk (eds.), Theory, Evidence, Data: Themes from George E. Smith, Springer Verlag. pp. 1-19. 2023.
    Taking (a proposition) to be true is an epistemic theme appearing throughout George E. Smith’s work; this includes his marvelous new book with Raghav Seth, Brownian motion and molecular reality: A study in theory-mediated measurement (2020; hereafter Smith and Seth). They use this notion to categorize changes in scientific perspectives both towards the ontological claim that molecules exist and towards molecular-kinetic theory. They illustrate the shift in viewpoint occurring over the successive…Read more
  •  90
    What is PA + con(PA) about, and where?
    Synthese 202 (3): 1-22. 2023.
    Justin Clarke-Doane offers what purports to be a stand-alone argument, relying on Gödel’s second incompleteness theorem, that if we hold that PA + Con(PA) and PA + ~ Con(PA) are equally true of their intended subjects, then there is no objective fact as to whether PA is consistent. It is shown that the argument is fallacious, although illuminating: The fallaciousness of the argument arises from a 20th-century shift in our understanding of interpreted languages from the view—derived from our expe…Read more
  •  212
    Summary of Talking about Nothing (review)
    Analysis 72 (2): 327-329. 2012.