•  615
    Extension, Intension and Dormitive Virtue
    Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 35 (4). 1999.
    Would be fairer to call Peirce’s philosophy of language “extensionalist” or “intensionalist”? The extensionalisms of Carnap and Quine are examined, and Peirce’s view is found to be prima facie similar, except for his commitment to the importance of “hypostatic abstraction”. Rather than dismissing this form of abstraction (famously derided by Molière) as useless scholasticism, Peirce argues that it represents a crucial (though largely unnoticed) step in much working inference. This, it is argued,…Read more
  •  1244
    What is a Logical Diagram?
    In Sun-Joo Shin & Amirouche Moktefi (eds.), Visual Reasoning with Diagrams, Springer. pp. 1-18. 2013.
    Robert Brandom’s expressivism argues that not all semantic content may be made fully explicit. This view connects in interesting ways with recent movements in philosophy of mathematics and logic (e.g. Brown, Shin, Giaquinto) to take diagrams seriously - as more than a mere “heuristic aid” to proof, but either proofs themselves, or irreducible components of such. However what exactly is a diagram in logic? Does this constitute a semiotic natural kind? The paper will argue that such a natural kind…Read more
  •  162
    Paul Forster, "Peirce and the Threat of Nominalism" (review)
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 51 (1): 137-8. 2013.
  •  768
    Charles S. Peirce’s semiotics uniquely divides signs into: i) symbols, which pick out their objects by arbitrary convention or habit, ii) indices, which pick out their objects by unmediated ‘pointing’, and iii) icons, which pick out their objects by resembling them (as Peirce put it: an icon’s parts are related in the same way that the objects represented by those parts are themselves related). Thus representing structure is one of the icon’s greatest strengths. It is argued that the implication…Read more
  •  386
    The Meaning of Meaning-Fallibilism
    Axiomathes 15 (2): 293-318. 2005.
    Much discussion of meaning by philosophers over the last 300 years has been predicated on a Cartesian first-person authority (i.e. “infallibilism”) with respect to what one’s terms mean. However this has problems making sense of the way the meanings of scientific terms develop, an increase in scientific knowledge over and above scientists’ ability to quantify over new entities. Although a recent conspicuous embrace of rigid designation has broken up traditional meaning-infallibilism to some exte…Read more
  •  141
    Gabriele Gava, "Peirce’s Account of Purposefulness: A Kantian Perspective" (review)
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 24 (2): 267-270. 2016.