Rutgers - New Brunswick
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2005
CV
Bellingham, Washington, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Metaphysics
  •  363
    The problem of change
    Philosophy Compass 1 (1). 2006.
    Our world is a world of change. Children are born and grow into adults. Material possessions rust and decay with age and ultimately perish. Yet scepticism about change is as old as philosophy itself. Heraclitus, for example, argued that nothing could survive the replacement of parts, so that it is impossible to step into the same river twice. Zeno argued that motion is paradoxical, so that nothing can alter its location. Parmenides and his followers went even further, arguing that the very conce…Read more
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  •  220
    The argument from temporary intrinsics
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 81 (3). 2003.
    The problem of temporary intrinsics is the problem of how persisting objects can have different intrinsic properties at different times. The relativizer responds to this problem by replacing ordinary intrinsic properties with relations to times. In this note, I identify and respond to three different objections to the relativizer's proposal, each of which can be traced to the work of David Lewis.
  •  174
    Humean supervenience and personal identity
    Philosophical Quarterly 55 (221): 582-593. 2005.
    Humeans hold that the nomological features of our world, including causal facts, are determined by the global distribution of fundamental properties. Since persistence presupposes causation, it follows that facts about personal identity are also globally determined. I argue that this is unacceptable for a number of reasons, and that the doctrine of Humean supervenience should therefore be rejected