•  96
    Kant’s Private-Clock Argument
    Kant Studien 88 (4): 442-461. 1997.
    Examining the effectiveness of the Kant’s Refutation of Idealism as a critique of a Cartesian account of consciousness, I argue that Kant's reasoning turns on the insight that self-knowledge presupposes independent temporal determination of the self. This insight bears an intriguing resemblance to claims about meaning and justification that appear in Wittgenstein's later work. Much as Wittgenstein rules out the possibility of a private language, whose meanings derive from acts of inner ostensive…Read more
  •  91
    Going around the vienna circle: Wittgenstein and verification
    Philosophical Investigations 28 (3). 2005.
    I argue that Wittgenstein’s short-lived verificationism (c.1929-30) differed from that of his contacts in the Vienna Circle in not being a reductionist view. It lay the groundwork for his later views that the meaning of a word is determined by its use and that certain "propositions of the form of empirical propositions" (On Certainty, §§96, 401, 402) act as "norm[s] of description" (On Certainty,§§167, 321). He gave it up once he realized that it contradicted his rejection of logical atomism, an…Read more
  •  19
    Being and Being True
    Idealistic Studies 29 (1-2): 33-51. 1999.
    Barry Allen, drawing on Wittgenstein's standard-metre example from Philosophical Investigations, argues there can be no determinate similarities or differences in the absence of a practice of measuring such similarities or differences. I contend that one can accept Allen's premises without accepting his conclusion if we draw a distinction between being and being true of the following sort: although it was not true, in the absence human or other epistemic practices, that water was H2O, nonetheles…Read more
  •  84
    Something less than paradise: The magic of modal realism
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 69 (3). 1991.
    Against the forces of modal ersatzism Lewis launches a variety of attacks, some of which are clearly compelling, others of which are less so. I argue that pictorial ersatzism cannot clearly be distinguished from magical ersatzism, and--more interestingly--that 'genuine' modal realism is subject to precisely the criticisms so fatal for the magical ersatzers.
  • Mark Quentin Gardiner, Semantic Challenges to Realism
    Philosophy in Review 21 (3): 175-177. 2001.
  • J.E. Malpas, Donald Davidson And The Mirror Of Meaning (review)
    Philosophy in Review 13 165-168. 1993.
  •  61
    Ebbs's Participant Perspective on Self-Knowledge
    Dialogue 41 (1): 3-26. 2002.
    It is sometimes objected that anti-individualism, because of its assumption of the constitutive role of natural and social environments in the individuation of intentional attitudes, raises sceptical worries about first-person authority--that peculiar privilege each of us is thought to enjoy with respect to non-Socratic self-knowledge. Gary Ebbs believes that this sort of objection can be circumvented, if we give up metaphysical realism and scientific naturalism and adopt what he calls a “partic…Read more
  •  8
    Wittgenstein on Names and Family Resemblances
    Eidos: The Canadian Graduate Journal of Philosophy 9 (1): 11-30. 1990.
    This paper (published in Eidos: The Canadian Graduate Journal of Philosophy, not Revista Filosofia de la Universidad del Norte) elaborates and defends Renford Bambrough's contention that Wittgenstein's discussion of family resemblances dissolves the traditional problem of universals, without slipping into either nominalism of realism.