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58IdentityIn Donald M. Borchert (ed.), The Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Supplement, Simon and Schuster Macmillan. 1996.
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194The Methodology of Modal Logic as MetaphysicsPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 88 (3): 717-725. 2014.
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1885Composition as a Kind of IdentityInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 59 (3): 264-294. 2016.Composition as identity, as I understand it, is a theory of the composite structure of reality. The theory’s underlying logic is irreducibly plural; its fundamental primitive is a generalized identity relation that takes either plural or singular arguments. Strong versions of the theory that incorporate a generalized version of the indiscernibility of identicals are incompatible with the framework of plural logic, and should be rejected. Weak versions of the theory that are based on the idea tha…Read more
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5538Concrete possible worldsIn Theodore Sider, John Hawthorne & Dean W. Zimmerman (eds.), Contemporary debates in metaphysics, Blackwell. pp. 111--134. 2008.In this chapter, I survey what I call Lewisian approaches to modality: approaches that analyze modality in terms of concrete possible worlds and their parts. I take the following four theses to be characteristic of Lewisian approaches to modality. (1) There is no primitive modality. (2) There exists a plurality of concrete possible worlds. (3) Actuality is an indexical concept. (4) Modality de re is to be analyzed in terms of counterparts, not transworld identity. After an introductory section i…Read more
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186Quantified Modal Logic and the Plural De ReMidwest Studies in Philosophy 14 (1): 372-394. 1989.Modal sentences of the form "every F might be G" and "some F must be G" have a threefold ambiguity. in addition to the familiar readings "de dicto" and "de re", there is a third reading on which they are examples of the "plural de re": they attribute a modal property to the F's plurally in a way that cannot in general be reduced to an attribution of modal properties to the individual F's. The plural "de re" readings of modal sentences cannot be captured within standard quantified modal logic. I …Read more
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133Review of Modality, Morality, and Belief: Essays in Honor of Ruth Barcan Marcus (review)Journal of Symbolic Logic 62 (1): 328-330. 1997.
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284Isolation and Unification: The Realist Analysis of Possible WorldsPhilosophical Studies 84 (2-3): 225-238. 1996.If realism about possible worlds is to succeed in eliminating primitive modality, it must provide an 'analysis' of possible world: nonmodal criteria for demarcating one world from another. This David Lewis has done. Lewis holds, roughly, that worlds are maximal unified regions of logical space. So far, so good. But what Lewis means by 'unification' is too narrow, I think, in two different ways. First, for Lewis, all worlds are (almost) 'globally' unified: at any world, (almost) every part is dir…Read more
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Areas of Specialization
| Metaphysics |
| Philosophy of Language |
| Philosophy of Mathematics |
| Philosophy of Physical Science |