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185Quantified 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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262The Relation Between General and Particular: Entailment vs. SupervenienceIn Dean Zimmerman (ed.), Oxford Papers in Metaphysics, vol. 3, Oxford University Press. pp. 251-287. 2006.Some argue, following Bertrand Russell, that because general truths are not entailed by particular truths, general facts must be posited to exist in addition to particular facts. I argue on the contrary that because general truths (globally) supervene on particular truths, general facts are not needed in addition to particular facts; indeed, if one accepts the Humean denial of necessary connections between distinct existents, one can further conclude that there are no general facts. When entailm…Read more
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369Plenitude of Possible StructuresJournal of Philosophy 88 (11): 607-619. 1991.Which mathematical structures are possible, that is, instantiated by the concrete inhabitants of some possible world? Are there worlds with four-dimensional space? With infinite-dimensional space? Whence comes our knowledge of the possibility of structures? In this paper, I develop and defend a principle of plenitude according to which any mathematically natural generalization of possible structure is itself possible. I motivate the principle pragmatically by way of the role that logical possibi…Read more
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1119David Lewis: On the Plurality of WorldsIn John Shand (ed.), Central Works of Philosophy v4: Twentieth Century: Moore to Popper, Routledge. pp. 246-267. 2006.David Lewis's book 'On the Plurality of Worlds' mounts an extended defense of the thesis of modal realism, that the world we inhabit the entire cosmos of which we are a part is but one of a vast plurality of worlds, or cosmoi, all causally and spatiotemporally isolated from one another. The purpose of this article is to provide an accessible summary of the main positions and arguments in Lewis's book.
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237The Fabric of Space: Intrinsic vs. Extrinsic Distance RelationsMidwest Studies in Philosophy 18 (1): 271-294. 1993.In this chapter, I evaluate various conceptions of distance. Of the two most prominent, one takes distance relations to be intrinsic, the other extrinsic. I recommend pluralism: different conceptions can peacefully coexist as long as each holds sway over a distinct region of logical space. But when one asks which conception holds sway at the actual world, one conception stands out. It is the conception of distance embodied in differential geometry, what I call the Gaussian conception. On this co…Read more
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Areas of Specialization
| Metaphysics |
| Philosophy of Language |
| Philosophy of Mathematics |
| Philosophy of Physical Science |