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101The Philosophy of A.J. Ayer Edited By Lewis Edwin Hahn La Salle,Illinois Open Court. 1992 xix+696 pp., US$54.95, $26.95 paper (review)Philosophy 69 (267): 107. 1994.
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40How much of the mind is a computerIn Peter Slezak (ed.), Computers, Brains and Minds, Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 47--69. 1989.
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68A Companion to Philosophy in Australia andNew ZealandAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 89 (4). 2011.Australasian Journal of Philosophy, Volume 89, Issue 4, Page 747-749, December 2011
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112Naming, Necessity, and Natural Kinds Edited by Stephen P. Schwartz Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1977, 277 pp., £11.25, £3.95 Paper (review)Philosophy 53 (203): 126. 1978.
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63Religious and Secular StatementsPhilosophy 49 (187): 33-46. 1974.The relation between religious and scientific explanations of events and states of affairs has been the subject of much debate. For example, are the statements ‘John's life was saved by surgery’ ‘John's life was saved in answer to prayer’ in competition with each other and, if so, in what way? They do not seem to be rival causal explanations, nor are they straightforwardly contradictory. Yet each seems to cast doubt on the other, or at least to make it to some extent redundant.
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1516The semantics and ontology of dispositionsMind 109 (436): 757--780. 2000.The paper looks at the semantics and ontology of dispositions in the light of recent work on the subject. Objections to the simple conditionals apparently entailed by disposition statements are met by replacing them with so-called 'reduction sentences' and some implications of this are explored. The usual distinction between categorical and dispositional properties is criticised and the relation between dispositions and their bases examined. Applying this discussion to two typical cases leads to…Read more
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78Foundations: Essays in Philosophy, Logic, Mathematics, and Economics (edited book)Humanties Press; Routledge. 1931.
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What does Subjective Decision Theory Tell Us?In Hallvard Lillehammer & David Hugh Mellor (eds.), Ramsey's Legacy, Oxford University Press. 2005.
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251Wholes and parts: The limits of compositionSouth African Journal of Philosophy 25 (2): 138-145. 2006.The paper argues that very different part-whole relations hold between different kinds of entities. While these relations share most of their formal properties, they need not share all of them. Nor need other mereological principles be true of all kinds of part–whole pairs. In particular, it is argued that the principle of unrestricted composition, that any two or more entities have a mereological sum, while true of sets and propositions, is false of things and events.
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25The unreality of tenseIn Robin Le Poidevin & Murray MacBeath (eds.), The Philosophy of time, Oxford University Press. pp. 47--59. 1993.
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197VI*—Conscious BeliefProceedings of the Aristotelian Society 78 (1): 87-102. 1978.D. H. Mellor; VI*—Conscious Belief, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 78, Issue 1, 1 June 1978, Pages 87–102, https://doi.org/10.1093/aristotelian.
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180VI*—I and NowProceedings of the Aristotelian Society 89 (1): 79-94. 1989.D. H. Mellor; VI*—I and Now, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 89, Issue 1, 1 June 1989, Pages 79–94, https://doi.org/10.1093/aristotelian/89.1.79.
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242Transcendental tense: D.h. MellorAristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 72 (1). 1998.[D. H. Mellor] Kant's claim that our knowledge of time is transcendental in his sense, while false of time itself, is true of tenses, i.e. of the locations of events and other temporal entities in McTaggart's A series. This fact can easily, and I think only, be explained by taking time itself to be real but tenseless. /// [J. R. Lucas] Mellor's argument from Kant fails. The difficulties in his first Antinomy are due to topological confusions, not the tensed nature of time. Nor are McTaggart' s d…Read more
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128Time, tense, and causation by Michael Tooley. Oxford: Clarendon press, 1997, XVI + 399 pp (review)Philosophy 73 (4): 629-645. 1998.
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2The singularly affecting facts of causationIn John Jamieson Carswell Smart, Philip Pettit, Richard Sylvan & Jean Norman (eds.), Metaphysics and Morality: Essays in Honour of J. J. C. Smart, Blackwell. 1987.
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148The Reduction of SocietyPhilosophy 57 (219): 51-75. 1982.How does the study of society relate to the study of the people it comprises? This longstanding question is partly one of method, but mainly one of fact, of how independent the objects of these two studies, societies and people, are. It is commonly put as a question of reduction, and I shall tackle it in that form: does sociology reduce in principle to individual psychology? I follow custom in calling the claim that it does ‘individualism’ and its denial ‘holism’.
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159Transcendental TenseAristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 72 (1). 1998.[D. H. Mellor] Kant's claim that our knowledge of time is transcendental in his sense, while false of time itself, is true of tenses, i.e. of the locations of events and other temporal entities in McTaggart's A series. This fact can easily, and I think only, be explained by taking time itself to be real but tenseless. /// [J. R. Lucas] Mellor's argument from Kant fails. The difficulties in his first Antinomy are due to topological confusions, not the tensed nature of time. Nor are McTaggart' s d…Read more
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5Too many universesIn Neil A. Manson (ed.), God and design: the teleological argument and modern science, Routledge. 2003.
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3The need for tenseIn L. Nathan Oaklander & Quentin Smith (eds.), The New Theory of Time, Yale Up. pp. 23--37. 1994.
Hugh Mellor
(1938 - 2020)
Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Specialization
| Metaphysics |
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Philosophy of Physical Science |
| Philosophy of Probability |
Areas of Interest
| Metaphysics |
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Philosophy of Probability |
| Philosophy of Physical Science |