•  22
    'Looks red' and dangerous talk
    Philosophy 70 (274): 545-554. 1995.
    This paper is partly to get rid of some irritation which I have felt at the quite common tendency of philosophers to elucidate ‘is red’ in terms of ‘looks red’. For a relatively recent example see, for example, Frank Jackson and Robert Pargetter, ‘An Objectivist′s Guide to Subjectivism about Colour’. However rather than try to make a long list of references, I would rather say ‘No names, no pack drill’. I have even been disturbed to find the use of the words ‘looks red’ that I am opposing ascrib…Read more
  •  3
    These comments are concerned to show that direct realism about perception is quite compatible with the physical and neuroscientific story. Use is made of D.M. Armstrong's account of perception as coming to believe by means of the senses. What we come to believe about is the bird on the gatepost, say. So the account is direct realist. But it is obviously compatible with the scientific story which explains how the coming to believe comes about. We can also identify beliefs with brain states
  •  14
    Wittgenstein, following a rule, and scientific psychology
    In Edna Ullmann-Margalit (ed.), The Scientific Enterprise, Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 123--137. 1992.
  •  22
    Why Moral Language?
    Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 36 (2). 1982.
  •  89
    Sellars on Process
    The Monist 65 (3): 302-314. 1982.
  •  45
    Prior and the basis of ethics
    Synthese 53 (1). 1982.
  •  94
    A form of metaphysical realism
    Philosophical Quarterly 45 (180): 301-315. 1995.
    This essay defends a view which is near enough to Putnam's characterization of metaphysical realism for it to be called by the same name. Indeterminacy of reference is conceded, in the sense that there may be multiple reference relations, but it is denied that this implied belief in unknowable noumena. It is enough for metaphysical realism as conceived here, that there be at least one reference relation. The essay also argues against defining truth epistemically. Even a Peircean ideal theory mig…Read more