•  252
    What Is an Inconsistent Truth Table?
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 94 (3): 533-548. 2016.
    ABSTRACTDo truth tables—the ordinary sort that we use in teaching and explaining basic propositional logic—require an assumption of consistency for their construction? In this essay we show that truth tables can be built in a consistency-independent paraconsistent setting, without any appeal to classical logic. This is evidence for a more general claim—that when we write down the orthodox semantic clauses for a logic, whatever logic we presuppose in the background will be the logic that appears …Read more
  •  65
    Piotr Łukowski , Paradoxes , tr. Marek Gensler. Reviewed by
    Philosophy in Review 32 (4): 307-309. 2012.
  •  2
    Jc Beall: Spandrels of Truth
    Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 16 (2). 2010.
  •  117
    Explanation And Solution In The Inclosure Argument
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 88 (2): 353-357. 2010.
    In a recent article, Emil Badici contends that the inclosure schema substantially fails as an analysis of the paradoxes of self-reference because it is question-begging. The main purpose of this note is to show that Badici's critique highlights a necessity condition for the success of dialectic about paradoxes. The inclosure argument respects this condition and remains solvent
  •  139
    This note motivates a logic for a theory that can express its own notion of logical consequence—a ‘syntactically closed’ theory of naive validity. The main issue for such a logic is Curry’s paradox, which is averted by the failure of contraction. The logic features two related, but different, implication connectives. A Hilbert system is proposed that is complete and non-trivial.