Washington, District of Columbia, United States of America
  •  166
    Moral certainty in Tolstoy
    Philosophy and Literature 24 (1): 49-66. 2000.
  •  56
    Flaubert's Laughter
    Philosophy and Literature 8 (2): 167-180. 1984.
  •  94
    Subjectivity in the machine
    Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 18 (September): 291-308. 1988.
  • Consciousness: Dvd
    with Ken Knisely and Floyd Tesmer
    Milk Bottle Productions. 2001.
    So who is that behind the face in the mirror? Better yet, what is that? What is the uncanny sense that one is an experiencing agent, a reflecting self? Can we explain consciousness? With Jay Lambert, Peter Caws, and Floyd Tesmer
  •  997
    Committees and consensus: How many heads are better than one?
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 16 (4): 375-391. 1991.
    The first section of this paper asks why the notion of consensus has recently come to the fore in the medical humanities, and suggests that the answer is a function of growing technological and professional complexity. The next two sections examine the concept of consensus analytically, citing some of the recent philosophical literature. The fourth section looks at committee deliberations and their desirable outcomes, and questions the degree to which consensus serves those outcomes. In the fift…Read more
  •  101
    Reviews (review)
    Synthese 17 (1): 219-253. 1967.
  •  71
    Texts without Referents (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 23 (3): 132-132. 1991.
  •  41
    Anxiety (review)
    Philosophy Now 113 48-50. 2016.
  •  1009
    The paradox of induction and the inductive wager
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 22 (4): 512-520. 1962.
  •  86
    Ontologies and evolutions
    Philosophical Forum 39 (4): 409-426. 2008.
    No Abstract.
  •  158
    The functions of definition in science
    Philosophy of Science 26 (3): 201-228. 1959.
    Definition is viewed in this paper as a cohesive element of theory, providing links between scientific constructs. The problem is approached first in terms of three orders--the historical, the logical, and the heuristic--in which the structure of science may be put together; a study of these is necessary if difficulties about priority of definition are to be resolved. The main part of the paper is devoted to an exercise in theory-construction which illustrates the five principal functions of def…Read more
  •  101
  •  75
    Minimal Consequentialism
    Philosophy 70 (273). 1995.
    In this paper I propose to set out, and argue for, a theory of what makes acts morally permissible. The claims about morality that I shall be advancing will be minimalist. By this I mean that the scope of the theory will be restricted to as small a class of acts or courses of action as possible, and its bearing on the members of that class to as narrow a range of characteristics as possible. My starting point is that, as Dostoevsky put it, 'everything is permitted'– unless there prove to be good…Read more
  •  75
    Coherence, System, and Structure
    Idealistic Studies 4 (1): 2-17. 1974.
    Systematic philosophy has for a long time now been disavowed as an objective or even as an interest by many professional philosophers whose view of their subject regards it as an activity of analysis rather than of construction. That this disclaimer should have become so common at a time when, in other disciplines, the idea of system was coming more and more into prominence suggests that philosophers and other scholars may somehow have been talking at cross-purposes. The opposition of analytic a…Read more
  • Sartre
    Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 172 (1): 61-62. 1979.
  • We Have Never Been Modern (review)
    Radical Philosophy 68. 1994.
  •  133
    A reappraisal of the conceptual scheme of science
    Philosophy of Science 24 (3): 221-234. 1957.
    1. Argument. Questions that have arisen about the “existence” of elementary particles and other entities of physics have often been dismissed as unprofitable, with the tacit assumption that the categories suitable for the discussion of everyday knowledge are not suitable for the discussion of physical knowledge, which requires mathematical treatment. But for the layman who stumbles at the discontinuity between his world and that of mathematical physics, and for the physicist who wishes his knowl…Read more
  •  53
  •  66
    Tractatus 7.1
    Philosophy Now 58 10-12. 2006.
  •  68
    Three logics, or the possibility of the improbable
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 25 (4): 516-526. 1965.
  •  64
    Modern Movements in European Philosophy (review)
    Teaching Philosophy 12 (3): 266-268. 1989.
  •  617
    The Case of the Athenian Stranger
    Teaching Philosophy 8 (2): 103-109. 1985.
  • Consciousness: No Dogs or Philosophers Allowed
    with Ken Knisely, Jay Lambert, and Floyd Tesmer
    DVD. forthcoming.
    So who is that behind the face in the mirror? Better yet, what is that? What is the uncanny sense that one is an experiencing agent, a reflecting self? Can we explain consciousness? With Jay Lambert, Peter Caws, and Floyd Tesmer.
  •  73
    Chairing a Symposium
    Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 61 (5): 863. 1988.
  •  149
    Univers physique, mondes culturels: le meme et les different
    Bulletin de la Société Américaine de Philosophie de Langue Française 3 (2): 106-113. 1991.
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