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40The Routledge Companion to Comics (edited book)Routledge. 2016.This cutting-edge handbook brings together an international roster of scholars to examine many facets of comics and graphic novels. Contributor essays provide authoritative, up-to-date overviewsof the major topics and questions within comic studies, offering readers a truly global approach to understanding the field.
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3Logic-as-Modeling: A New Perspective on FormalizationDissertation, The Ohio State University. 2000.I propose a novel way of viewing the connection between mathematical discourse and the mathematical logician's formalizations of it. We should abandon the idea that formalizations are accurate descriptions of mathematical activity. Instead, logicians are in the business of supplying models in much the same way that a mathematical physicist formulates models of physical phenomena or the hobbyist constructs models of ships. ;I first examine problems with the traditional view, and I survey some pri…Read more
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163The Yablo Paradox: An Essay on Circularity (edited book)Oxford University Press. 2014.Roy T Cook examines the Yablo paradox--a paradoxical, infinite sequence of sentences, each of which entails the falsity of all others that follow it. He focuses on questions of characterization, circularity, and generalizability, and pays special attention to the idea that it provides us with a semantic paradox that involves no circularity.
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73Monads and Mathematics: The Logic of Leibniz's MereologyStudia Leibnitiana 32 (1): 1-20. 2000.Es bestehen tiefgreifende Zusammenhänge zwischen Leibniz' Mathematik und seiner Metaphysik. Dieser Aufsatz hat das Ziel, das Verständnis für diese beiden Bereiche zu erweitern, indem er Leibniz' Mereologie (die Theorie der Teile und des Ganzen) näher untersucht. Zunachst wird Leibniz' Mereologie primär anhand seiner Schrift “Initia rerum mathematicarum metaphysica" rekonstruiert. Dieses ehrgeizige Programm beginnt mit dem einfachen Begriff der Kompräsenz, geht dann iiber zu komplexeren Begriffen…Read more
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67A Dictionary of Philosophical LogicEdinburgh University Press. 2009.This dictionary introduces undergraduate and post-graduate students in philosophy, mathematics, and computer science to the main problems and positions in philosophical logic. Coverage includes not only key figures, positions, terminology, and debates within philosophical logic itself, but issues in related, overlapping disciplines such as set theory and the philosophy of mathematics as well. Entries are extensively cross-referenced, so that each entry can be easily located within the context of…Read more
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378The T-schema is not a logical truthAnalysis 72 (2): 231-239. 2012.It is shown that the logical truth of instances of the T-schema is incompatible with the formal nature of logical truth. In particular, since the formality of logical truth entails that the set of logical truths is closed under substitution, the logical truth of T-schema instances entails that all sentences are logical truths.
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60ParadoxesPolity. 2013.Paradoxes are arguments that lead from apparently true premises, via apparently uncontroversial reasoning, to a false or even contradictory conclusion. Paradoxes threaten our basic understanding of central concepts such as space, time, motion, infinity, truth, knowledge, and belief. In this volume Roy T Cook provides a sophisticated, yet accessible and entertaining, introduction to the study of paradoxes, one that includes a detailed examination of a wide variety of paradoxes. The book is organi…Read more
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362Comment on R.T. Cook's Review of If A, Then B: How the World Discovered LogicHistory and Philosophy of Logic 35 (3): 303-304. 2014.We are grateful for Roy T. Cook's attention to our work in his recent review of our book If A, Then B: How the World Discovered Logic. But Professor Cook leaves two misimpressions that we should like to correct. First, we have never maintained (as he phrases it) that "one's premises must be more certain than the conclusions that follow from them, ignoring the obvious logical fact that, if B logically follows from A, then B is provably at least as probable as A." Instead, we assert that one must …Read more
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217Do Comics Require Pictures? Or Why Batman #663 Is a ComicJournal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 69 (3): 285-296. 2011.
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196The No-No Paradox Is a ParadoxAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 89 (3): 467-482. 2011.The No-No Paradox consists of a pair of statements, each of which?says? the other is false. Roy Sorensen claims that the No-No Paradox provides an example of a true statement that has no truthmaker: Given the relevant instances of the T-schema, one of the two statements comprising the?paradox? must be true (and the other false), but symmetry constraints prevent us from determining which, and thus prevent there being a truthmaker grounding the relevant assignment of truth values. Sorensen's view …Read more
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169RICHARD G. HECK, Jr. Frege's Theorem. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2011. ISBN 978-0-19-969564-5. Pp. xiv + 307Philosophia Mathematica 20 (3): 346-359. 2012.
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3Appendix: How to read GrundgesetzeIn Gottlob Frege (ed.), The basic laws of arithmetic, University of California Press. 1893.This appendix is intended to assist the reader in becoming comfortable with the notations, rules, and definitions of Frege's Grundgesetze.
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122Mathematics, Models, and ModalityHistory and Philosophy of Logic 31 (3): 287-289. 2010.John P. Burgess, Mathematics, Models, and Modality: Selected Philosophical Essays. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008. xiii + 301 pp. $90.00, £50.00. ISBN 978-0-521-88034-3. Adobe eBook, $...
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137Frege's RecipeJournal of Philosophy 113 (7): 309-345. 2016.In this paper, we present a formal recipe that Frege followed in his magnum opus “Grundgesetze der Arithmetik” when formulating his definitions. This recipe is not explicitly mentioned as such by Frege, but we will offer strong reasons to believe that Frege applied it in developing the formal material of Grundgesetze. We then show that a version of Basic Law V plays a fundamental role in Frege’s recipe and, in what follows, we will explicate what exactly this role is and explain how it differs f…Read more
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210Conservativeness, Stability, and AbstractionBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 63 (3): 673-696. 2012.One of the main problems plaguing neo-logicism is the Bad Company challenge: the need for a well-motivated account of which abstraction principles provide legitimate definitions of mathematical concepts. In this article a solution to the Bad Company challenge is provided, based on the idea that definitions ought to be conservative. Although the standard formulation of conservativeness is not sufficient for acceptability, since there are conservative but pairwise incompatible abstraction principl…Read more
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285Vagueness and mathematical precisionMind 111 (442): 225-247. 2002.One of the main reasons for providing formal semantics for languages is that the mathematical precision afforded by such semantics allows us to study and manipulate the formalization much more easily than if we were to study the relevant natural languages directly. Michael Tye and R. M. Sainsbury have argued that traditional set-theoretic semantics for vague languages are all but useless, however, since this mathematical precision eliminates the very phenomenon (vagueness) that we are trying to …Read more
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251There Are Non-circular Paradoxes (But Yablo’s Isn't One of Them!)The Monist 89 (1): 118-149. 2006.
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38Yablo Paradox. 2015.The Yablo Paradox The Yablo Paradox implies there is no way to coherently assign a truth value to any of the sentences in the countably infinite sequence of sentences, each of the form, “All of the subsequent sentences are false.” Specifically, the Yablo Paradox arises when we consider the following infinite sequence of sentences: The … Continue reading Yablo Paradox →.
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112Iteration one more timeNotre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 44 (2): 63--92. 2003.A neologicist set theory based on an abstraction principle (NewerV) codifying the iterative conception of set is investigated, and its strength is compared to Boolos's NewV. The new principle, unlike NewV, fails to imply the axiom of replacement, but does secure powerset. Like NewV, however, it also fails to entail the axiom of infinity. A set theory based on the conjunction of these two principles is then examined. It turns out that this set theory, supplemented by a principle stating that ther…Read more
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142Drawings of Photographs in ComicsJournal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 70 (1): 129-138. 2012.
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330What’s Wrong with TonkJournal of Philosophical Logic 34 (2): 217-226. 2005.In “The Runabout Inference Ticket” AN Prior (1960) examines the idea that logical connectives can be given a meaning solely in virtue of the stipulation of a set of rules governing them, and thus that logical truth/consequence.
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149Charles E. Rickart. Structuralism and Structures: A Mathematical Perspective. Singapore: World Scientific Publishing, 1995. pp. xiii + 219. ISBN 981-02-1860-5 (review)Philosophia Mathematica 6 (2): 227-231. 1998.
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823Response to my criticsAnálisis Filosófico 32 (1): 69-97. 2012.During the Winter of 2011 I visited SADAF and gave a series of talks based on the central chapters of my manuscript on the Yablo paradox. The following year, I visited again, and was pleased and honored to find out that Eduardo Barrio and six of his students had written ‘responses’ that addressed the claims and arguments found in the manuscript, as well as explored new directions in which to take the ideas and themes found there. These comments reflect my thoughts on these responses (also collec…Read more
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University of St. Andrews3- Year Post-doctoral Fellow
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University of MinnesotaTenured
Ohio State University
PhD, 2000
St Andrews, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Specialization
| Science, Logic, and Mathematics |
PhilPapers Editorships
| Theories of Mathematics |