•  385
    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
  •  140
    Gabriele Gava, "Peirce’s Account of Purposefulness: A Kantian Perspective" (review)
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 24 (2): 267-270. 2016.
  •  723
    Bill Gates is not a parking meter: Philosophical quality control in automated ontology building
    with Samuel Sarjant
    Proceedings of the Symposium on Computational Philosophy, AISB/IACAP World Congress 2012 (Birmingham, England, July 2-6). 2012.
    The somewhat old-fashioned concept of philosophical categories is revived and put to work in automated ontology building. We describe a project harvesting knowledge from Wikipedia’s category network in which the principled ontological structure of Cyc was leveraged to furnish an extra layer of accuracy-checking over and above more usual corrections which draw on automated measures of semantic relatedness.
  •  803
    The Problem of the Essential Icon
    American Philosophical Quarterly 45 (3): 207-232. 2008.
    Charles Peirce famously divided all signs into icons, indices and symbols. The past few decades have seen mainstream analytic philosophy broaden its traditional focus on symbols to recognise the so-called essential indexical. Can the moral now be extended to icons? Is there an “essential icon”? And if so, what exactly would be essential about it? It is argued that there is and it consists in logical form. Danielle Macbeth’s radical new “expressivist” interpretation of Frege’s logic and Charles P…Read more
  •  496
    Anne Freadman, "The Machinery of Talk: Charles Peirce and the Sign Hypothesis" (review)
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 84 (4): 642-645. 2006.
    This book, officially a contribution to the subject area of Charles Peirce’s semiotics, deserves a wider readership, including philosophers. Its subject matter is what might be termed the great question of how signification is brought about (what Peirce called the ‘riddle of the Sphinx’, who in Emerson’s poem famously asked, ‘Who taught thee me to name?’), and also Peirce’s answer to the question (what Peirce himself called his ‘guess at the riddle’, and Freadman calls his ‘sign hypothesis’).
  •  507
    Richard Smyth, "Reading Peirce Reading" (review)
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 80 (3). 2002.
    Book Information Reading Peirce Reading. By Richard A. Smyth. Rowman and Littlefield. Maryland. 1997. Pp. ix + 327. Hardback, US$64.50. Paperback, US$24.95.