-
103Prior and Lorenzen on QuantificationGrazer Philosophishe Studien 41 150-173. 1991.A case against Prior’s theory of propositions goes thus: (1) everyday propositional generalizations are not substitutional; (2) Priorean quantifications are not objectual; (3) quantifications are substitutional if not objectual; (4) thus, Priorean quantifications are substitutional; (5) thus that Priorean quantifications are not ontologically committed to propositions provides no basis for a similar claim about our everyday propositional generalizations. Prior agrees with (1) and (2). He rejects…Read more
-
182Frege on identitiesHistory and Philosophy of Logic 21 (3): 195-205. 2000.The idea underlying the Begriffsschrift account of identities was that the content of a sentence is a function of the things it is about. If so, then if an identity a=b is about the content of its contained terms and is true, then a=a and a=b have the same content. But they do not have the same content; so, Frege concluded, identities are not about the contents of their contained terms. The way Frege regarded the matter is that in an identity the terms flanking the symbol for identity do not hav…Read more
-
112Geach on GeneralizationDialogue 41 (2): 221-. 2002.There are plausible objections to substitutional construals of generalization. But these objections do not apply to a substitutional construal of generalization proposed by Peter Geach several years ago. This paper examines Geach’s conception.
-
Intensionality and Truth: An Essay on the Philosophy of A. N. PriorStudia Logica 63 (2): 287-290. 1999.
-
169W.d. Ross on acting from motivesJournal of Value Inquiry 22 (4): 299-306. 1988.This paper defends a position held by W, D, Ross that it is no part of one’s duty to have a certain motive since one cannot by choice have it here and now.
-
137Dualism and the argument from continuityPhilosophical Studies 37 (1): 55-59. 1980.One of the things C. D Broad argued many years ago is that certain 'scientific' arguments against dualist interactionism come back in the end to a metaphysical bias in favor of materialism. Here the authors pursue this basic strategy against another 'scientific' argument against dualism itself. The argument is called 'the argument from continuity'. According to this argument the fact that organisms and species develop by insensible gradations renders dualism implausible. The authors try to demon…Read more
-
597Expressing PropositionsProceedings of the 1979 Mid America Linguistics Conference 10 93-100. 1980.The paper’s purpose is to get clearer on what it is to express a proposition. A proposition is understood as anything that can be asserted, assumed, conjectured, stated, believed, and so on. It is not something that can be asked, ordered, requested, and so on. The paper tries to provide groundwork for a successful analysis by making distinctions and clarifying problems.
-
339Convention T and Basic Law VAnalysis 62 (4): 289-292. 2002.It is argued that Convention T and Basic Law V of Frege’s Grungesetze share three striking similarities. First, they are universal generalizations that are intuitively plausible because they have so many obvious instances. Second, both are false because they yield contradictions. Third, neither gives rise to a paradox.
-
73Can There be a Proof that an Unprovable Sentence of Arithmetic is True?Dialectica 43 (43): 289-292. 1989.Various authors of logic texts are cited who either suggest or explicitly state that the Gödel incompleteness result shows that some unprovable sentence of arithmetic is true. Against this, the paper argues that the matter is one of philosophical controversy, that it is not a mathematical or logical issue.
-
127The Received Distinction Between Pragmatics, Syntax and SemanticsFoundations of Language 11 (1): 97-104. 1974.The distinction between pragmatics, semantics, and syntax, at least as traditionally construed, is argued to be defective in various respects.
-
Chapter 1: IntroductionPoznan Studies in the Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities 90 35-42. 2006.
-
97Should persons be sacrificed for the general welfare?Journal of Value Inquiry 16 (2): 149-152. 1982.It is argued that Robert Nozick is wrong in asserting that persons should not be sacrificed for the general welfare.
-
112Tractatus 6.2–6.22Philosophical Investigations 13 (2): 126-136. 1990.It is argued that Wittgenstein’s remarks 6.2-6.22 Tractatus fare well when one focuses on non-quantificational arithmetic, but they are problematic when one moves to quantificational arithmetic.
-
175A defense of SommersPhilosophical Studies 29 (5). 1976.Jon Fjeld wrote a paper that he begins by nicely outlining why various criticisms of Fred Sommers theory of types and categories fail. Fjeld puts forth a criticism that avoids the problems with these other criticisms. But, it is argued, his criticism also fails.
-
University of Nebraska, LincolnRetired faculty
Lincoln, Nebraska, United States of America