•  194
    Ordinary Objects, Ordinary Language, and Identity
    The Monist 88 (4): 534-570. 2005.
    The thesis of this paper concerns the fundamental role of "ordinary objects" with respect to the structure of natural language. It ascribes their role as basic objects of reference to their being both natural and "given" individuals. Section 1 will summarize that idea. Further argument will be offered in Section 2. An objection appealing to physical theory will be answered in Section 3. Sections 4, 5, and 6 consider the implications of the thesis for current theories of the identity of "ordinary…Read more
  •  99
    Berkeley's Immaterialism and Kant's Transcendental Idealism
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 13 51-69. 1982.
    Ever since its first publication critics of Kant'sCritique of Pure Reasonhave been struck by certain strong formal resemblances between transcendental idealism and Berkeley's immaterialism. Both philosophers hold that the sensible world is mind-dependent, and that from this very mind-dependence we can draw a refutation of scepticism of the senses.