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103Frege on Conceptual and Propositional AnalysisGrazer Philosophische Studien 81 (1): 235-257. 2010.In his Foundations of Arithmetic, Frege aims to extend our a priori arithmetical knowledge by answering the question what a natural number is. He rejects conceptual analysis as a method to acquire a priori knowledge . Later he unsuccessfully tried to solve the problems that beset conceptual analysis . If these problems remain unsolved, which rational method can he use to extend our a priori knowledge about numbers? I will argue that his fundamental arithmetical insight that numbers belong to con…Read more
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134‘Demonstrative’ colour concepts: Recognition versus preservationRatio 22 (2): 234-249. 2009.Arguments for and against the existence of demonstrative concepts of shades and shapes turn on the assumption that demonstrative concepts must be recognitional capacities. The standard argument for this assumption is based on the widely held view that concepts are those constituents of propositional attitudes that account for an attitude's inferential potential. Only if demonstrative concepts of shades are recognitional capacities, the standard argument goes, can they account for the inferential…Read more
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151Routledge philosophy guidebook to Frege on sense and referenceRoutledge. 2011.The Routledge Philosophy Guidebook to Frege On Sense and Reference helps the student to get to grips with Frege's thought, and introduces and assesses:the ...
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6297Brentano on ConsciousnessIn Uriah Kriegel (ed.), The Routledge Handbook of Franz Brentano and the Brentano School, Routledge. pp. 49-60. 2017.Consider a perceptual activity such as seeing a colour, hearing a tone, tasting a flavour. How are these activities related to one’s awareness of them? I will use Brentano’s struggle with this question to guide the reader through the development of his view on consciousness. My starting point will be Brentano’s book Die Psychologie des Aristoteles (Brentano 1867), in which he developed an inner sense view of consciousness (§§1-2). Brentano’s early view is underexplored in the literature, but cru…Read more
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122"Inner Perception Can Never Become Inner Observation”: Brentano on Awareness and ObservationPhilosophers' Imprint 15. 2015.Self-representational theories of consciousness hold that a mental phenomenon is conscious if, and only if, it presents, among other things, itself. But in conscious perception one may lose oneself in the object perceived and not be aware of one’s perceiving. The paper develops a Brentano-inspired response to this objection. He follows Aristotle in holding that one is aware of one’s perceiving only ‘on the side’: when one perceives something one’s perception neither is nor can become observation…Read more
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237Unsaturatedness: Wittgenstein's challenge, Frege's answerProceedings of the Aristotelian Society 109 (1pt1): 61-82. 2009.Frege holds the distinction between complete (saturated) and incomplete (unsaturated) things to be a basic distinction of logic. Many disagree. In this paper I will argue that one can defend Frege's distinction against criticism if one takes, inspired by Frege, a wh -question to be the paradigm incomplete expression.
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270Frege's Theory of Hybrid Proper Names Developed and DefendedMind 116 (464): 947-982. 2007.Does the English demonstrative pronoun 'that' (including complex demonstratives of the form 'that F') have sense and reference? Unlike many other philosophers of language, Frege answers with a resounding 'No'. He held that the bearer of sense and reference is a so-called 'hybrid proper name' (Künne) that contains the demonstrative pronoun and specific circumstances of utterance such as glances and acts of pointing. In this paper I provide arguments for the thesis that demonstratives are hybrid p…Read more
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170Sense-Only-Signs: Frege on Fictional Proper NamesGrazer Philosophische Studien 82 (1): 375-400. 2011.I explore Frege's thesis that fictional proper names are supposed to have only sense and no reference. How can one make this thesis compatible with Frege's view that sense determines reference? By holding that fictional proper names are introduced in a particular kind of speech act. Or so I argue.
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85Bolzano sur le temps et la persistancePhilosophiques 30 (1): 105-125. 2003.Comment une proposition qui affirme que a est fatigué le matin et n’est pas fatigué le midi peut-elle être vraie ? Bolzano soutient que toute proposition portant sur une chose contingente contient, dans la composante-sujet, la représentation d’un temps. Dans cet article, je reconstruis et évalue les arguments de Bolzano en les comparant à ceux de son adversaire principal, le tenant de la position selon laquelle toute proposition portant sur une chose contingente contient une copule renfermant la…Read more
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167Proper Names: Philosophical and Linguistic PerspectivesErkenntnis 80 (2): 191-194. 2015.Proper names play an important role in our understanding of linguistic ‘aboutness’ or reference. For instance, the name-bearer relation is a good candidate for the paradigm of the reference relation: it provides us with our initial grip on this relation and controls our thinking about it. For this and other reasons proper names have been at the center of philosophical attention. However, proper names are as controversial as they are conceptually fundamental. Since Kripke’s seminal lectures Namin…Read more
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213Brentano on inner consciousnessDialectica 60 (4): 411-432. 2006.I offer a reconstruction of Brentano's view of inner consciousness and show how Brentano prevented a regress of higher-order mental acts
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80Knowledge Transmission and Linguistic SenseTheoria: Revista de Teoría, Historia y Fundamentos de la Ciencia 15 (2): 287-302. 2000.Michael Dummett holds that the sense of a natural language proper name is part of its linguistic meaning. I argue that this view sits uncomfortably with Frege's observation that the sense of a natural language proper name varies from speaker to speaker. Moreover, the thesis under discussion is not supported by Frege's views on communication. Recently Richard Heck has tried to develop an argument which is intended to show that assertoric communication with sentences containing proper names is onl…Read more
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116What Brentano criticizes in ReidBritish Journal for the History of Philosophy 12 (1). 2004.No abstract
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IntroductionIn Markus Textor (ed.), The Austrian contribution to analytic philosophy, Routledge. 2006.
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235The use theory of meaning and semantic stipulationErkenntnis 67 (1). 2007.According to Horwich’s use theory of meaning, the meaning of a word W is engendered by the underived acceptance of certain sentences containing W. Horwich applies this theory to provide an account of semantic stipulation: Semantic stipulation proceeds by deciding to accept sentences containing an as yet meaningless word W. Thereby one brings it about that W gets an underived acceptance property. Since a word’s meaning is constituted by its (basic) underived acceptance property, this decision end…Read more
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396Frege on Judging as Acknowledging the TruthMind 119 (475): 615-655. 2010.According to Frege, judgement is the ‘logically primitive activity’. So what is judgement? In his mature work, he characterizes judging as ‘acknowledging the truth’ (‘Anerkennen der Wahrheit’). Frege’s remarks about judging as acknowledging the truth of a thought require further elaboration and development. I will argue that the development that best suits his argumentative purposes takes acknowledging the truth of a thought to be a non-propositional attitude like seeing an object; it is a menta…Read more
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197Devitt on the Epistemic Authority of Linguistic IntuitionsErkenntnis 71 (3): 395-405. 2009.Michael Devitt has argued that a satisfactory explanation of the authority of linguistic intuitions need not assume that they are derived from tacit knowledge of principles of grammar. Devitt’s Modest Explanation is based on a controversial construal of linguistic intuitions as meta-linguistic central-processor judgements. I will argue that there are non-judgemental responses to linguistic strings, linguistic seemings, which are evidence for linguistic theories. Devitt cannot account for their e…Read more
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108Reviews the unity of the proposition . By Richard Gaskin. Oxford: Oxford university press, 2008, pp. XII+455. Isbn: 78-0-19-923945-0. £60 (review)Philosophy 85 (4): 563-567. 2010.
Areas of Interest
| Metaphysics |
| Philosophy of Language |
| 19th Century Philosophy |