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79Kant, Wittgenstein and the fate of analysisIn Micahel Beaney (ed.), The Analytic Turn, Routledge. pp. 142. 2007.
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280Kant’s Non-Conceptualism, Rogue Objects, and The Gap in the B DeductionInternational Journal of Philosophical Studies 19 (3). 2011.This paper is about the nature of the relationship between (1) the doctrine of Non-Conceptualism about mental content, (2) Kant's Transcendental Idealism, and (3) the Transcendental Deduction of the Pure Concepts of the Understanding, or Categories, in the B (1787) edition of the Critique of Pure Reason, i.e., the B Deduction. Correspondingly, the main thesis of the paper is this: (1) and (2) yield serious problems for (3), yet, in exploring these two serious problems for the B Deduction, we als…Read more
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106The Trouble with Truth in Kant's Theory of MeaningHistory of Philosophy Quarterly 10 (1): 1-20. 1993.
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147Review: Forster, Michael, Kant and Skepticism (review)Philosophical Quarterly 61 (244): 635-637. 2011.
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136Review: Weatherston, Heidegger's Interpretation of Kant: Categories, Imagination, and Temporality (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2003 (8). 2003.
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303A Kantian critique of scientific essentialismPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 58 (3): 497-528. 1998.According to Kant in the Prolegomena, the natural kind proposition (GYM) "Gold is a yellow metal" is analytically true, necessary, and a priori. Saul Kripke and Hilary Putnam have argued that on the contrary propositions such as (GYM) are neither analytic, nor necessary, nor a priori. The Kripke-Putnam view is based on the doctrine of "scientific essentialism" (SE). It is a direct consequence of SE that propositions such as (GE) "Gold is the element with atomic number number 79" are metaphysical…Read more
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59(A) Books: (3) Kant, Science, and Human Nature (Oxford: OUP, forthcoming). (2) Rationality and Logic (Cambridge: MIT Press, forthcoming). (1) Kant and the Foundations of Analytic Philosophy (Oxford: Clarendon/OUP, 2001 [pbk., 2004]). (B) Articles: (30) "Kant, Wittgenstein, and the Fate of Analysis," in M. Beaney (ed.), The Analytic Turn (London: Routledge, forthcoming.) (29) "Kant and the Analytic Tradition," in C. Boundas (ed.), A Companion to the Twentieth-Century Philosophies (Edinburgh: Univ…Read more
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87Kant's Theory of Empirical Judgment and Modern SemanticsHistory of Philosophy Quarterly 7 (3). 1990.
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172Kant in the Twentieth CenturyIn Routledge Companion to Twentieth-Century Philosophy, . pp. 150-203. 2008.Alfred North Whitehead (1861–1947) quotably wrote in 1929 that “the safest general characterization of the European philosophical tradition is that it consists of a series of footnotes to Plato.”1 The same could be said, perhaps with even greater accuracy, of the twentieth-century Euro-American philosophical tradition and Immanuel Kant (1724–1804).2 In this sense the twentieth century was the post-Kantian century. Twentieth-century philosophy in Europe and the USA was dominated by two distinctiv…Read more
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100How Ideas Became Meanings: Locke and the Foundations of Semantic TheoryReview of Metaphysics 44 (4). 1991.THERE IS A NOTORIOUS THESIS in the philosophy of language which runs as follows: meanings are wholly mind-dependent, in the sense that they exist only in particular human minds. We might call this "the thesis of semantic psychologism." Versions of this thesis have been attacked and rejected by some of the most important philosophers of language in the twentieth century: Frege, Husserl, Wittgenstein, and, most recently, Hilary Putnam.
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133The Myth of the Given and the Grip of the GivenDiametros 27 25-46. 2011.In this paper I argue that the Sellarsian Myth of the Given does not apply to all forms of Non-Conceptualism; that Kant is in fact a non-conceptualist of the right-thinking kind and not a Conceptualist, as most Kant-interpreters think; and that an intelligible and defensible Kantian Non-Conceptualism can be developed which supports the thesis that true perceptual beliefs are non-inferentially justified and also normatively funded by direct, embodied, intentional interactions with the manifest wo…Read more
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291Logical Cognition: Husserl’s Prolegomena and the Truth in PsychologismPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 53 (2): 251-275. 1993.
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165Kant, science, and human natureOxford University Press. 2006.Robert Hanna argues for the importance of Kant's theories of the epistemological, metaphysical, and practical foundations of the "exact sciences"--relegated to the dustbin of the history of philosophy for most of the 20th century. In doing so he makes a valuable contribution to one of the most active and fruitful areas in contemporary scholarship on Kant.
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50The Unity of UnderstandingReview of Metaphysics 44 (4): 864-864. 1991.To think is to think-about objects; this simple fact is of course what philosophers of mind have dubbed "intentionality." The traditional doctrine of intentionality has it that the mind pictures or in some sense represents its objects to itself. Kant initiates a radical departure from this doctrine by insisting that the mind forms or in some sense constructs its objects. This power of mental construction Kant calls the "understanding".
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229Kant and the foundations of analytic philosophyOxford University Press. 2001.Robert Hanna presents a fresh view of the Kantian and analytic traditions that have dominated continental European and Anglo-American philosophy over the last two centuries, and of the connections between them. But this is not just a study in the history of philosophy, for out of this emerges Hanna's original approach to two much-contested theories that remain at the heart of contemporary philosophy. Hanna puts forward a new 'cognitive-semantic' interpretation of transcendental idealism, and a v…Read more
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143From an Ontological Point of View: Hegel's Critique of the Common LogicReview of Metaphysics 40 (2). 1986.Hegel's logic is often understood as a competitor to ordinary formal logic; this leads to such false accusations as that hegel "denies the principle of non-Contradiction." on the contrary, Hegel's speculative logic is wholly conservative with respect to ordinary logic. What hegel denies is ordinary logic's suitability to be a paradigm for philosophy. Hegel's logic, Itself, Can be seen as arising from a critical ontological reflection on ordinary logic
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189The inner and the outer: Kant's 'refutation' reconstructedRatio 13 (2). 2000.In Skeptical idealism says that possibly nothing exists outside my own conscious mental states. Purported refutations of skeptical idealism – whether Descartes's, Locke's, Reid's, Kant's, Moore's, Putnam's, or Burge's – are philosophically scandalous: they have convinced no one. I argue (1) that what is wrong with the failed refutations is that they have attempted to prove the wrong thing – i.e., that necessarily I have veridical perceptions of distal material objects in space, and (2) that a ch…Read more
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277Beyond the Myth of the Myth: A Kantian Theory of Non-Conceptual ContentInternational Journal of Philosophical Studies 19 (3). 2011.In this essay I argue that a broadly Kantian strategy for demonstrating and explaining the existence, semantic structure, and psychological function of essentially non-conceptual content can also provide an intelligible and defensible bottom-up theory of the foundations of rationality in minded animals. Otherwise put, if I am correct, then essentially non-conceptual content constitutes the semantic and psychological substructure, or matrix, out of which the categorically normative a priori super…Read more
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57Perspective in Whitehead's MetaphysicsReview of Metaphysics 37 (3): 650-651. 1984.Recent books on Whitehead have shown a marked tendency to use Whiteheadian notions in ways not strictly compatible with Whitehead's own explicit views. This fact may suggest either the fecundity of Whitehead's ideas, or a general dissatisfaction with the fully developed cosmological scheme as outlined in Process and Reality. In any case, Ross's book continues in the recent tradition of "neo-Whiteheadian" as opposed to "strictly Whiteheadian" interpretations of Whitehead's thought. The purpose of…Read more
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61Review: Powell, Kant's Theory of Self-Consciousness (review)Review of Metaphysics 45 (3): 631-633. 1992.
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