St Andrews, FIfe, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
  •  853
    The Contents of the Receptacle
    Modern Schoolman 80 (3): 171-190. 2003.
    The Receptacle of the title is, of course, the ‘Receptacle of all becoming’ in Plato’s Timaeus. Plato likens it to a ‘nurse’, and even calls it a ‘mother’. He speaks of it as that in which its contents come to be, only in their turn to disappear from it. He compares it to a mass of gold which someone incessantly remoulds into different shape. He declares it completely unchanging: ‘it does not depart from its own character in any way'. What is its character? It is the character of possessing and …Read more
  •  120
    On What Would Have Happened Otherwise: A Problem for Determinism
    Review of Metaphysics 39 (3): 433-454. 1986.
    THIS PAPER is concerned with an ancient rebuttal of determinism, possibly the oldest in our Western tradition. It runs as follows: if whatever happens happens of necessity, there is no point at all in deliberating; but the consequent is intolerable, so the antecedent must be rejected. This objection is put forward by Aristotle, and it reappears in elaborated forms in later works of antiquity. But for the most part, philosophers on both sides of the determinist debate have remained unimpressed by…Read more