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1615Hume On Is and Ought: Logic, Promises and the Duke of WellingtonIn Paul Russell (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of David Hume, Oxford University Press. 2016.Hume seems to contend that you can’t get an ought from an is. Searle professed to prove otherwise, deriving a conclusion about obligations from a premise about promises. Since (as Schurz and I have shown) you can’t derive a substantive ought from an is by logic alone, Searle is best construed as claiming that there are analytic bridge principles linking premises about promises to conclusions about obligations. But we can no more derive a moral obligation to pay up from the fact that a promise …Read more
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1625Bertrand Russell: Meta-ethical pioneerPhilosophy of the Social Sciences 26 (2): 181-204. 1996.Bertrand Russell was a meta-ethical pioneer, the original inventor of both emotivism and the error theory. Why, having abandoned emotivism for the error theory, did he switch back to emotivism in the 1920s? Perhaps he did not relish the thought that as a moralist he was a professional hypocrite. In addition, Russell's version of the error theory suffers from severe defects. He commits the naturalistic fallacy and runs afoul of his own and Moore's arguments against subjectivism. These defects cou…Read more
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1350Pythagorean powers or a challenge to platonismAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 74 (4). 1996.The Quine/Putnam indispensability argument is regarded by many as the chief argument for the existence of platonic objects. We argue that this argument cannot establish what its proponents intend. The form of our argument is simple. Suppose indispensability to science is the only good reason for believing in the existence of platonic objects. Either the dispensability of mathematical objects to science can be demonstrated and, hence, there is no good reason for believing in the existence of plat…Read more
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1381Two dogmatistsInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 30 (1 & 2). 1987.Grice and Strawson's 'In Defense of a Dogma is admired even by revisionist Quineans such as Putnam (1962) who should know better. The analytic/synthetic distinction they defend is distinct from that which Putnam successfully rehabilitates. Theirs is the post-positivist distinction bounding a grossly enlarged analytic. It is not, as they claim, the sanctified product of a long philosophic tradition, but the cast-off of a defunct philosophy - logical positivism. The fact that the distinction can b…Read more
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699Review of Sabina Lovibond:Realism and Imagination in Ethics (review)Australasian Journal of Philosophy 62 (3): 313-315. 1984.A critique of a kind of 'moral realism' that is in fact a rather thinly disguised version of global historicist idealism. If you don't like the idea that facts are hard and values are soft, you can pump up the values to make them as hard as the facts or soften down the facts to make them as soggy as the values. Lovibond prefers the latter strategy. After some critical remarks about Lovibond's book (including its implicit authoritarianism) I conclude with some equally critical remarks about McD…Read more
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238Russell's moral philosophyStanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2007.A 27000 word survey of Russell’s ethics for the SEP. I argue that Russell was a meta-ethicist of some significance. In the course of his long philosophical career, he canvassed most of the meta-ethical options that have dominated debate in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries — naturalism, non-naturalism, emotivism and the error-theory (anticipating Stevenson and Ayer on the one hand and Mackie on the other), and even, to some extent, subjectivism and relativism. And though none of his theor…Read more
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1253Getting the Wrong Anderson? A Short and Opinionated History of New Zealand PhilosophyIn Graham Robert Oppy & Nick Trakakis (eds.), The Antipodean philosopher, Lexington Books. pp. 169-195. 2011.Is the history of philosophy primarily a contribution to PHILOSOPHY or primarily a contribution to HISTORY? This paper is primarily contribution to history (specifically the history of New Zealand) but although the history of philosophy has been big in New Zealand, most NZ philosophers with a historical bent are primarily interested in the history of philosophy as a contribution to philosophy. My essay focuses on two questions: 1) How did New Zealand philosophy get to be so good? And why, g…Read more
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1389If not non-cognitivism, then what?In Charles Pigden (ed.), Hume on Is and Ought, Palgrave-macmillan. 2010.Taking my cue from Michael Smith, I try to extract a decent argument for non-cognitivism from the text of the Treatise. I argue that the premises are false and that the whole thing rests on a petitio principi. I then re-jig the argument so as to support that conclusion that Hume actually believed (namely that an action is virtuous if it would excite the approbation of a suitably qualified spectator). This argument too rests on false premises and a begged question. Thus the Motivation Argument fa…Read more
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 |