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6506Conspiracy Theories and the Conventional WisdomEpisteme 4 (2): 219-232. 2007.Abstract Conspiracy theories should be neither believed nor investigated - that is the conventional wisdom. I argue that it is sometimes permissible both to investigate and to believe. Hence this is a dispute in the ethics of belief. I defend epistemic “oughts” that apply in the first instance to belief-forming strategies that are partly under our control. But the beliefforming strategy of not believing conspiracy theories would be a political disaster and the epistemic equivalent of selfmutilat…Read more
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697Review of The Social and Political Thought of Bertrand Russell by Philip Ironside (review)Australasian Journal of Philosophy 75 (2): 257-259. 1997.I take a dim view of this absurdly overpraised book, marred as it is is by errors of fact, interpretation and method and surprisingly uniformed (as it appears to be) about Russian history. It shows what can go wrong with Skinnerite intellectual history in the hands of somebody less gifted than Skinner himself.
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760Letter from a Gentleman in Dunedin to a Lady in the CountrysideIn Hume on Is and Ought, Palgrave-macmillan. 2010.I argue 1) That in his celebrated Is/Ought passage, Hume employs ‘deduction’ in the strict sense, according to which if a conclusion B is justly or evidently deduced from a set of premises A, A cannot be true and B false, or B false and the premises A true. 2) That Hume was following the common custom of his times which sometimes employed ‘deduction’ in a strict sense to denote inferences in which, in the words of Dr Watts’ Logick, ‘the premises, according to the reason of things, do really con…Read more
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LOVIBOND, S.: "Realism and Imagination in Ethics" (review)Australasian Journal of Philosophy 62 (n/a): 315. 1984.
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407Hume on Is and Ought (edited book)Palgrave-Macmillan. 2010.It ‘seems altogether inconceivable', says Hume, that this ‘new relation' ought ‘can be a deduction' from others ‘which are entirely different from it' The idea that you can't derive an Ought from an Is, moral conclusions from non-moral premises, has proved enormously influential. But what did Hume mean by this famous dictum? Was he correct? How does it fit in with the rest of his philosophy? And what does this suggest about the nature of moral judgements? This collection, the first on this topic…Read more
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691Book Note: Gert, Joshua, Normative Bedrock: Response-Dependence Rationality and Reasons, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2013, x + 218 pp, hardback (review)Australasian Journal of Philosophy (1): 1-1. 2013.No abstract
Dunedin, Otago, New Zealand
Areas of Specialization
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| Philosophy of Action |
| Meta-Ethics |
| Logic and Philosophy of Logic |
| Philosophy of Social Science |
| 20th Century Philosophy |
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |