•  1147
    The Selection Problem
    Revue Internationale de Philosophie 262 (4): 519-537. 2012.
    In 'Fiction and Fictionalism', Mark Sainsbury has recently dubbed “Selection Problem” a serious trouble for Meinongian object theories. Typically, Meinongianism has been phrased as a kind of realism on nonexistent objects : these are mind-independent things, not mental simulacra, having the properties they have independently from the activity of any cognitive agent. But how can one single out an object we have no causal acquaintance with, and which is devoid of spatiotemporal location, picking i…Read more
  • L’esistenza Non È Logica
    with Roberto Ciuni
    Rivista di Estetica 45. 2010.
  •  1356
    Sometimes mereologists have problems with counting. We often don't want to count the parts of maximally connected objects as full-fledged objects themselves, and we don't want to count discontinuous objects as parts of further, full-fledged objects. But whatever one takes "full-fledged object" to mean, the axioms and theorems of classical, extensional mereology commit us to the existence both of parts and of wholes – all on a par, included in the domain of quantification – and this makes mereolo…Read more
  •  331
    Meaning, Metaphysics, and Contradiction
    American Philosophical Quarterly 43 (4): 283-297. 2006.
    None.