Columbia University
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1955
Waltham, Massachusetts, United States of America
  •  9
    Discussion
    with M. Dummett, C. Lejewski, and W. V. Quine
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 39 (2): 361-362. 1974.
  •  47
    Vice & virtue in everyday life: introductory readings in ethics (edited book)
    with Christina Hoff Sommers
    Harcourt College Publishers. 1997.
    " Vice and virtue in everyday life is a bestseller in college ethics because students find the readings both personally engaging and intellectually challenging. Under the guidance of classical and modern writers on morality, students using this textbook come to grips with moral issues of everyday life. They discover that some currently fashionable approaches to morality, such as egoism and relativism, have long histories. They also become aquainted with the debates and criticisms of various mora…Read more
  •  49
    Ratiocination: An empirical account
    Ratio 21 (2). 2008.
    Modern thinkers regard logic as a purely formal discipline like number theory, and not to be confused with any empirical discipline such as cognitive psychology, which may seek to characterize how people actually reason. Opposed to this is the traditional view that even a formal logic can be cognitively veridical – descriptive of procedures people actually follow in arriving at their deductive judgments (logic as Laws of Thought). In a cognitively veridical logic, any formal proof that a deducti…Read more
  •  51
    The world, the facts, and primary logic
    Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 34 (2): 169-182. 1993.
  •  152
    The logic of natural language
    Oxford University Press. 1982.
  •  233
    Putnam’s Born-Again Realism
    Journal of Philosophy 94 (9): 453-471. 1997.
  •  144
    Dissonant beliefs
    Analysis 69 (2): 267-274. 2009.
    1. Philosophers tend to talk of belief as a ‘propositional attitude.’ As Fodor says:" The standard story about believing is that it's a two place relation, viz., a relation between a person and a proposition. My story is that believing is never an unmediated relation between a person and a proposition. In particular nobody grasps a proposition except insofar as he is appropriately related to some vehicle that expresses the proposition. " Fodor's story – that belief is a three-place relation betw…Read more
  •  31
    Are There Atomic Propositions?
    Midwest Studies in Philosophy 6 (1): 59-68. 1981.
  •  102
    Why Is There Something and Not Nothing?
    Analysis 26 (6). 1966.
  •  132
    Types and ontology
    Philosophical Review 72 (3): 327-363. 1963.
  •  29
    A program for coherence
    Philosophical Review 73 (4): 522-527. 1964.
  •  19
    The passing of privileged uniqueness
    Journal of Philosophy 49 (11): 392-397. 1952.
  •  15
    Putnam’s Born-Again Realism
    Journal of Philosophy 94 (9): 453. 1997.