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603Two spheres, twenty spheres, and the identity of indiscerniblesPacific Philosophical Quarterly 86 (4). 2005.I argue that the standard counterexamples to the identity of indiscernibles fail because they involve a commitment to a certain kind of primitive or brute identity that has certain very unpalatable consequences involving the possibility of objects of the same kind completely overlapping and sharing all the same proper parts. The only way to avoid these consequences is to reject brute identity and thus to accept the identity of indiscernibles. I also show how the rejection of the identity of indi…Read more
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253Interpreting Spinoza: The Real is the RationalJournal of the History of Philosophy 53 (3): 523-535. 2015.in his characteristically generous and searching discussion of my book, Spinoza, Daniel Garber rightly points out that I structure my interpretation of Spinoza’s system around the principle of sufficient reason. This is the principle that, as I and others sometimes put it, each fact has an explanation and is thus not brute, or the principle that each thing has an explanation. The ‘or’ will soon be important. Indeed, it might seem that I am too focused on the PSR—certainly I seem that way to Garb…Read more
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184Review: Descartes-Inseparability-Almog (review)Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 70 (3). 2005.Joseph Almog’s elegant and concise monograph, What am I?, simultaneously advances a new interpretation of Descartes’ dualism and offers a powerful articulation of the bearing of essentialist metaphysics on the mind-body problem. Some may object to Almog’s endeavor to see Descartes so much in light of recent, Kripkean developments in metaphysics. Some may object to this, but not me. The study of the history of philosophy is tough, and we cannot afford to neglect any potential source of insight. S…Read more
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124Review of John Carriero, Between Two Worlds: A Reading of Descartes's Meditations (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (7). 2009.
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107Essentialism versus EssentialismIn Tamar Szabo Gendler & John Hawthorne (eds.), Conceivability and Possibility, Oxford University Press Uk. pp. 223--252. 2002.I argue that the key motivation for the essentialist is that modal intuitions, such as "Humphrey might have won", are not to be explicated in terms of persons in other possible situations who are similar to the actual Humphrey. However, because of a need to preserve the necessity of identity, the essentialist must claim that certain other intuitions (such as "Hesperus might not have been Phosphorus") have to be understood in terms of similarity (as in Kripke) or have to be rejected (as in Yablo)…Read more
New Haven, Connecticut, United States of America
Areas of Interest
| Metaphysics |
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |