•  164
    The aesthetics of mirror reversal
    Philosophical Studies 100 (2): 175-191. 2000.
    A flop is a picture that mirror reverses the original scene. Some flops are reversed copies. For instance, mirror reversal is systematic with technologies that require contact between a template and an imprint surface. Other flops are just pictures that have undergone the operation of flopping. For example, a slide that is inserted backwards into a projector is a flop.
  •  97
    Mirror imagery and biological selection
    Biology and Philosophy 17 (3): 409-422. 2002.
    Lake Tanganiyka has lefty and righty cichlid fish that show there can be natural selection for a trait over its mirror image counterpart.This raises the question Can there be biological selection of a whole organism over its mirror image counterpart? That is, could the fitness of a fish be altered by simply changing it into its own enantaniomorph? My answer is no. I present Flatlander thought experiment to demonstrate that mirror imagecounterparts are duplicates because they only differ in how t…Read more
  •  64
    Infinite "backward" induction arguments
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 80 (3). 1999.
  •  177
    The poster boy for my paper is the King's Messenger in Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking Glass. Recall that since the White Queen lives backwards, her memory works forwards. She pities Alice who can only remember things after they happen. Alice asks which things the Queen remembers best: `Oh, things that happened the week after next,' the Queen replied in a careless tone. `For instance, . . . there's the King's Messenger. He's in prison now, being punished: and the trial doesn't even begin til…Read more
  •  175
    (1984). Conditional blindspots and the knowledge squeeze: A solution to the prediction paradox. Australasian Journal of Philosophy: Vol. 62, No. 2, pp. 126-135
  •  149
    A strengthened prediction paradox
    Philosophical Quarterly 36 (145): 504-513. 1986.
  •  176
    Recalcitrant variations of the prediction paradox
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 60 (4). 1982.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  212
    Originless Sin: Rational Dilemmas for Satisficers
    Philosophical Quarterly 56 (223). 2006.
    Suppose you have an infinite past. If you had banked the spare dollar you have always had, then the interest would have made you rich by now. Your procrastination is inexcusable. But what should you have done? At any time at which you invest the dollar you would regret not investing it earlier. Satisficers can solve prospective puzzles involving infinite choice but cannot solve this retrospective puzzle about regret. A moral version of the puzzle suggests that there can be inevitable moral failu…Read more
  •  14
    A meta-conception is a hypothetical one. It answers a question by imagining someone (usually a more able conceiver) answering that question via an act of imagination. Thus, meta-conceptions stand to thought experiments as thought experiments stand to executed experiments. If conceivability entails possibility, then meta-conceiving entails possibility. Meta-conceptions would then work as well as thought experiments. But they do not work as well, giving fresh doubt about ‘Conceivability entails po…Read more
  •  75
    Blindspotting and Choice Variations of the Prediction Paradox
    American Philosophical Quarterly 23 (4). 1986.
  •  91
    The bottle imp and the prediction paradox
    Philosophia 15 (4): 421-424. 1986.
  •  85
    The bottle imp and the prediction paradox, II
    Philosophia 17 (3): 351-354. 1987.
  •  134
    Philosophy for the Eye
    The Philosophers' Magazine 42 (42): 31-39. 2008.
    The tower of language overshadows a cluster of smaller towers. These are the towers corresponding to the sensory systems. Tallest among this group is the tower of vision, “the master sense”.
  •  90
    Commercial Applications of Skepticism
    In Walter Sinnott-Armstrong (ed.), Pyrrhonian skepticism, Oxford University Press. pp. 208-232. 2004.
    This essay argues that Pyrrhonian skeptics, including Fogelin, are conditional skeptics, and hence not really skeptics at all. Conditional skeptics refute themselves, for when they assert conditionals, they make assertions. Since these conditionals are philosophical in content, Pyrrhonians do not avoid all philosophical assertions as they claim to do.
  •  63
    This chapter focuses on Thomas Kuhn's account of thought experiments. It begins with what Kuhn takes to be the smart talk about thought experiments. It then details Kuhn's amendments to this view and raises objections, most of which are directed against the notion of local incoherence. Finally, Kuhn's error is reconstructed in order to salvage the considerable insight that it contains.
  • Vagueness entry in the
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2023.
  •  40
    Vagueness and the logic of ordinary language
    In Dale Jacquette (ed.), Philosophy of Logic, North Holland. pp. 155. 2002.
  •  88
    If people never dreamed, would it make a difference to how they picture reality? Or themselves? Philosophers would certainly lose the most natural way of introducing skepticism. The Chinese Taoist, Chuang Tzu (369 B. C. - ?), dreamt he was a butterfly. When he awoke he wondered whether he was a man who dreamt he was butterfly or a butterfly now dreaming he is a man. Any experience can be explained as either a faithful representation of the world or as a mere figment of a sleeper's imagination.
  •  168
    Moore's problem with iterated belief
    Philosophical Quarterly 50 (198): 28-43. 2000.
    Positive thinkers love Watty Piper's The little engine that could. The story features a train laden with toys for deserving children on the other side of the mountain. After the locomotive breaks down, a sequence of snooty locomotives come up the track. Each engine refuses to pull the train up the mountain. They are followed by a weary old locomotive that declines, saying "I cannot. I cannot. I cannot." But then a bright blue engine comes up the track. He manages to chug over the mountain by ave…Read more
  •  217
    Mirror notation: Symbol manipulation without inscription manipulation
    Journal of Philosophical Logic 28 (2): 141-164. 1999.
    Stereotypically, computation involves intrinsic changes to the medium of representation: writing new symbols, erasing old symbols, turning gears, flipping switches, sliding abacus beads. Perspectival computation leaves the original inscriptions untouched. The problem solver obtains the output by merely alters his orientation toward the input. There is no rewriting or copying of the input inscriptions; the output inscriptions are numerically identical to the input inscriptions. This suggests a lo…Read more
  •  185
    Logical luck
    Philosophical Quarterly 48 (192): 319-334. 1998.
  •  173
    A vague demonstration
    Linguistics and Philosophy 23 (5): 507-522. 2000.
    Poindexter points and asserts `That is Clinton''. But it is vague as to whether he pointed at Clinton or pointed at the more salient man, Gore. Since the vagueness only occurs at the level of reference fixing, the content of the identity proposition is precise. Indeed, it is either a necessary truth or a necessary falsehood. Since Poindexter''s utterance has a hidden truth value by virtue of vagueness, it increases the plausibility of epistemicism. Epistemicism says that vague statements have hi…Read more
  •  28
    Zande Sorites: Illogical Insouciance and Inconsistent Verstehen
    Erkenntnis 79 (Suppl 7): 1315-1328. 2014.
    When Bertrand Russell alerted Gottlob Frege to an inconsistency in his Grundgesetze, Frege relinquished deep commitments. When Edward Evans-Pritchard alerted the Azande to an inconsistency in their beliefs about witchcraft inheritance, they did not revise their beliefs. Nor did they engage in the defensive maneuvers depicted in Plato’s dialogues. Evans-Pritchard characterized their indifference to contradiction as irrational. My historical thesis is that the ensuing anthropological debate mirror…Read more
  •  216
    Unbeggable questions
    Analysis 56 (1): 51-55. 1996.
    I can get away with it because no one is in a position to call me on it. Professor Robinson cannot consistently complain that (A) begs the question against his thesis that there is no such fallacy. He would discourage anyone from "helping" him by accusing me of committing the fallacy against him. With advocates like that, who needs adversaries? I. EMBEDDING PERSPECTIVES After all, Robinson has a viable reply to my argument. He should simply deny my premise. Later I will show how (A) might ration…Read more
  •  192
    Permission to cheat
    Analysis 67 (3): 205-214. 2007.
    Seizing the opportunity to apply what they had learned, the students declared a cheating competition. Outspoken participants (future lawyers, politicians, and captains of industry) bragged about their ruses. But to their chagrin, an ethics student prevailed.
  •  163
    Vague Music
    Philosophy 86 (2): 231-248. 2011.
    Is listening to music like looking through a kaleidoscope? Formalists contend that music is meaningless. Most music theorists concede that this austere thesis is surprisingly close to the truth. Nevertheless, they refute formalism with a little band of diffusely referential phenomena, such as musical quotation, onomatopoeia, exemplification, and leitmotifs. These curiosities ought to be pressed into a new campaign against assumptions that vagueness can only arise in the semantically lush setting…Read more
  •  218
    The Twin Towers riddle
    Philosophical Studies 162 (1): 109-117. 2013.