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85Rush Rhees, Wittgenstein and the possibility of discoursePhilosophical Investigations 25 (1). 2002.
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11Wittgenstein and Kierkegaard: Religion, Individuality and Philosophical MethodPhilosophical Books 31 (2): 82-83. 2009.
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29Other Times: Philosophical Perspectives on Past, Present and FutureMind 108 (432): 761-764. 1999.
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493A Dialogue on Scientific RealismCogito 6 (3): 163-169. 1992.This is a dialogue in which David and I explore purportedly scientistic elements of scientific realism, in which we ultimately consider questions about natural kinds.
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111Other Times: Philosophical Perspectives on Past, Present and FutureCambridge University Press. 1997.We view things from a certain position in time: in our language, thought, feelings and actions, we draw distinctions between what has happened, is happening, and will happen. Frequently, approaches to this feature of our lives - those seen in disputes between tensed and tenseless theories, between realist and anti-realist treatments of past and future, and in accounts of historical knowledge - embody serious misunderstandings of the character of the issues; they misconstrue the relation between …Read more
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113Human Beings (edited book)Cambridge University Press. 1991.What is the importance of the notion 'human being'? The contributors to this collection have radically different approaches, some accepting and others denying its validity for a proper understanding of what a person is and for our ethical thought about each other. Contributors on both sides of the divide eloquently defend their views in ways that stand in sharp contrast to some current work in moral philosophy and philosophy of mind. Epistemological and theological issues are also raised in the …Read more
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26Rush Rhees: The reality of discourseIn John Edelman (ed.), Sense and reality: essays out of Swansea, De Gruyter. pp. 1-22. 2009.
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28An introduction to the philosophy of mindPalgrave. 2001.This book differs from others by rejecting the dualist approach associated in particular with Descartes. It also casts serious doubt on the forms of materialism that now dominate English language philosophy. Drawing in particular on the work of Wittgenstein, a central place is given to the importance of the notion of a human being in our thought about ourselves and others.
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92Other human beingsSt. Martin's Press. 1990.The author argues that a view of what a person is cannot be separated from our view of how another person is to be treated. What is needed is an acknowledgement of the tangible, persisting human being--a being with a distinctive bodily form and having its own distinctive kind of value--as a fundamental feature of our thought.
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66Language, Belief and Human BeingsRoyal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 53 141-157. 2003.We may think of the core of Cartesian dualism as being the thesis that each of us is essentially a non-material mind or soul: ‘non-material’ in the sense that it has no weight, cannot be seen or touched, and could in principle continue to exist independently of the existence of any material thing. That idea was, of course, of enormous importance to Descartes himself, and we may feel that having rejected it, as most philosophers now have, we have rejected what is of greatest philosophical signifi…Read more
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53Fatalism: thoughts about tomorrow's sea battlePhilosophy 94 (2): 295-312. 2019.The hold of the fatalistic reasoning that Aristotle criticizes is dependent, first, on the idea, articulated by Frege, that the real candidates for truth and falsity are something other than particular contingent happenings such as affirmations or thinkings, and, second, on the idea that the demand for speculative reflection overrides any demand for practical deliberation. Standard challenges to the reasoning embody the same presuppositions and so simply perpetuate the core confusions. They do s…Read more
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176Language, belief and human beingsIn Anthony O'Hear (ed.), Minds and Persons, Cambridge University Press. pp. 141-157. 2003.We may think of the core of Cartesian dualism as being the thesis that each of us is essentially a non-material mind or soul: ‘non-material’ in the sense that it has no weight, cannot be seen or touched, and could in principle continue to exist independently of the existence of any material thing. That idea was, of course, of enormous importance to Descartes himself, and we may feel that having rejected it, as most philosophers now have, we have rejected what is of greatest philosophical signifi…Read more
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131Human beings and giant squids (on ascribing human sensations and emotions to non-human creatures)Philosophy 69 (268): 135-50. 1994.A television nature programme a year or two ago contained a striking sequence in which a giant squid was under threat from some other creature. The squid responded in a way which struck me immediately and powerfully as one of fear. Part of what was striking in this sequence was the way in which it was possible to see in the behaviour of a creature physically so very different from human beings an emotion which was so unambiguously and specifically one of fear.
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76ARCHON: A distributed artificial intelligence system for industrial applicationsIn N. Jennings & G. O'Hare (eds.), Foundations of Distributed Artificial Intelligence, Wiley. pp. 319--344. 1996.
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35Memories, traces and the significance of the pastIn Christoph Hoerl & Teresa McCormack (eds.), Time and memory: issues in philosophy and psychology, Oxford University Press. 2001.
David Cockburn
University of Wales Trinity St David's
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University of Wales Trinity St David'sRetired faculty
Areas of Specialization
| The Passage of Time, Misc |
| Ludwig Wittgenstein |
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Philosophy of Language |