University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1974
CV
Rochester, New York, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Philosophy of Religion
Areas of Interest
Epistemology
Metaphysics
  •  92
    The Freedom of God
    Faith and Philosophy 19 (4): 425-436. 2002.
  •  37
    Proxy consent and counterfactual wishes
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 8 (4): 405-416. 1983.
    I discuss conditions for the validity of proxy consent to treatment on behalf of an incompetent person. I distinguish those incompetents who, when previously competent, expressed an opinion on the treatment in question from those who were never competent or who, though previously competent, never expressed an opinion on the proposed treatment. In the former case valid proxy consent usually requires respecting the stated wishes of the patient. The latter case is more difficult. I consider a widel…Read more
  •  17
    New Perspectives on Old-Time Religion (review)
    Philosophical Review 101 (2): 449-542. 1992.
  •  45
    Alvin Plantinga (review)
    Faith and Philosophy 5 (2): 214-219. 1988.
  •  41
    Reply to Harold Moore
    International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 9 (4): 246. 1978.
  •  11
    Omniscience and Knowledge De Se Et De Praesenti
    In D. F. Austin (ed.), Philosophical Analysis, Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 251--258. 1988.
  •  58
    Identity Conditions and Events
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 11 (1). 1981.
    According to Myles Brand, ‘[t]he key to advocating a particularist account of events -or any account of events - is to provide adequate identity conditions’. He thinks that the function of an identity condition is ‘to specify the nature of’ events.To state an identity condition for events is to provide a way to complete the formula: The mere fact that a proposed completion of is true does not imply that it is an informative identity condition for events or that it plays any role in specifying th…Read more
  •  303
  •  49
    The Openness of God (review)
    Faith and Philosophy 14 (2): 248-252. 1997.
  •  209
    Prophecy, freedom, and the necessity of the past
    Philosophical Perspectives 5 425-445. 1991.
    One of the strongest arguments for the incompatibility of divine foreknowledge and human free action appeals to the apparent fixity or necessity of the past. Two leading responses to the argument—Ockhamism, which denies a premiss of the argument, and the so-called “eternity solution”, which holds that strictly speaking God does not have foreknowledge—have both come under attack on similar grounds. Neither response, it is alleged, is adequate to the case of divine prophecy. In this paper I sha…Read more
  •  131
    Omnipresence
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2019.
  •  25
    Chisholm on states of affairs
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 54 (2). 1976.
    This Article does not have an abstract