•  116
    Warranting interpretations
    with Alan Gauld
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9 (2): 239-240. 1986.
  •  75
    Currently, our official rationality is still of a Cartesian kind; we are still embedded in a mechanistic order that takes it that separate, countable entities (spatial forms), related logically to each other, are the only ‘things’ that matter to us—an order clearly suited to advances in robotics. Unfortunately, it is an order that renders invisible ‘relational things’, non-objective things that exist in time, in the transitions from one state of affairs to another, things that ‘point’ toward pos…Read more
  •  174
    Underlabourers for science or toolmakers for society? (review)
    History of the Human Sciences 3 (3): 443-457. 1990.
    Roy Bhaskar, Reclaiming Reality: a Critical Introduction to Contemporary Philosophy, London: Verso, 1989, £24.95, paper £8.95, ix + 218 pp
  •  159
    Making Sense on the Boundaries: On Moving Between Philosophy and Psychotherapy
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 37 55-. 1994.
    The philosopher is the man who has to cure himself of many sicknesses of the understanding before he can arrive at the notions of the sound human understanding.
  •  87
    I criticize Carpendale and Lewis's attempt to produce a Wittgensteinian theory, as an alternative to work in the “theory of mind” tradition, not because I disagree with it as theory, but because Wittgenstein would be critical of any attempt to make such a use of his work. Theories are concerned with discovering rules, principles, of lawful regularities hidden behind appearances. Wittgenstein's whole latter philosophy is inimical to such an aim. His concern is not with theories but with descripti…Read more
  •  44
    Cartesian Change, Chiasmic Change
    Janus Head 6 (1): 6-29. 2003.