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48Aussagen- und Prädikatenlogik: Eine EinführungJ.B. Metzler. 2018.Dieses Lehrbuch vermittelt eines der wichtigsten Werkzeuge der Philosophie durch die Einführung in die Grundideen einer formalen Sprache. Schrittweise werden so die relevanten Sprachstrukturen aufgedeckt, die dann in der Aussagen- und Prädikatenlogik formalisiert werden. Sowohl die Semantik als auch ein Kalkül des natürlichen Schließens werden jeweils detailliert diskutiert. In Kombination mit einer Lernplattform wird der zentrale Stoff anwendungsorientiert und plastisch vermittelt, was die auch…Read more
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92Lying beyond a Conversational Purpose: A Critique of Stokke's Assertion-Based Account of LyingJournal of Philosophy 116 (2): 106-118. 2019.In this paper, I argue that a particular assertion-based account of lying, which rests on Stalnaker’s theory of assertions, proposed by Andreas Stokke, is both too broad and too narrow. I tentatively conclude that the account fails because lying does not necessarily involve a conversational purpose.
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89Understanding through modeling: the explanatory power of inadequate representationSynthese 192 (12): 3777-3780. 2015.status: published.
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388Philosophical Methods Under Scrutiny: Introduction to the Special Issue "Philosophical Methods"Synthese 197 (3): 915-923. 2020.This paper is the introduction to the Special Issue “Philosophical Methods”. The Special Issue will be published by Synthese.
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90If You Understand, You Won’t Be LuckyGrazer Philosophische Studien 93 (2): 196-211. 2016.The present paper argues that there is a structural difference between classical cases involving knowledge-undermining environmental luck, and cases where a subject acquires understanding in the presence of environmental luck. This difference appears to bear on arguments against the reductionist thesis that understanding is a special form of knowledge.
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35Mental Disorder and the Indirect Construction of Social FactsJournal of Social Ontology 3 (1): 27-48. 2016.In this paper, I argue for two claims, that on a common conception of the second order property of being a mental disorder, some facts about mental disorders are the result of social constructions, and that the way facts about mental disorders are constructed differs from the received view on social construction. The difference is examined, a novel type of social construction is identified, and it is suggested that there are numerous other types of social facts that are constructed in a similar …Read more
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106Free Will, Foreknowledge, and Future‐Dependent BeliefsSouthern Journal of Philosophy 55 (4): 500-520. 2017.Recently, a time-honored assumption has resurfaced in some parts of the free will debate: if past divine beliefs or past truths about what we do depend on what we do, then these beliefs and truths are, in a sense, up to us; hence, we are able to act otherwise, despite the existence of past truths or past divine beliefs about our future actions. In this paper, I introduce and discuss a novel incompatibilist argument that rests on. This argument is interesting in itself, for it is independent of a…Read more
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148The Concept of ReductionSpringer. 2014.This volume investigates the notion of reduction. Building on the idea that philosophers employ the term ‘reduction’ to reconcile diversity and directionality with unity, without relying on elimination, the book offers a powerful explication of an “ontological” notion of reduction the extension of which is (primarily) formed by properties, kinds, individuals, or processes. It argues that related notions of reduction, such as theory-reduction and functional reduction, should be defined in terms …Read more
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95Jason Stanley, How Propaganda Works: Princeton University Press, 2015. Hardcover ISBN 9780691164427 (review)Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 19 (3): 817-819. 2016.
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103On how we perceive the social world. Criticizing Gallagher’s view on direct perception and outlining an alternativeConsciousness and Cognition 17 (2): 544-552. 2008.Criticizing Gallagher’s view on direct perception, I develop a basic model of social perception. According to the Cartesians another person’s intentions are not directly accessible to an observer. According to the cognitivist Cartesians conscious processes are necessary for social understanding. According to the Anti-Cartesians social perception is direct. Since both of these latter approaches face serious problems, I will argue in favor of an alternative: anti-cognitivist Cartesianism. Distingu…Read more
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142Pains, Pills and Properties - Functionalism and the First-Order/Second-Order DistinctionDialectica 66 (4): 543-562. 2012.Among philosophers of mind, it is common to assume that at least some mental properties are functional in nature, and that functional properties are second-order properties. In the functionalist literature, the notion of being a second-order property is cashed out in three different ways: (i) in terms of semantic features of characterizations or definitions of properties, (ii) in terms of syntactic features of second-order quantification, and (iii) in terms of a metaphysical criterion, according…Read more
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410Identity, Asymmetry, and the Relevance of Meanings for Models of ReductionBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 64 (4): 747-761. 2013.Assume that water reduces to H2O. If so water is identical to H2O. At the same time, if water reduces to H2O then H2O does not reduce to water–the reduction relation is asymmetric. This generates a puzzle–if water just is H2O it is hard to see how we can account for the asymmetry of the reduction relation. The paper proposes a solution to this puzzle. It is argued that the reduction predicate generates intensional contexts and that in order to account for the asymmetry, we should develop conditi…Read more
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Personal Identity. An Introduction to the Philosophy of John PerryIn Albert Newen & Raphael van Riel (eds.), Identity, Language, and Mind. An Introduction to the Philosophy of John Perry, Csli. 2012.
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116The content of model-based informationSynthese 192 (12): 3839-3858. 2015.The paper offers an account of the structure of information provided by models that relevantly deviate from reality. It is argued that accounts of scientific modeling according to which a model’s epistemic and pragmatic relevance stems from the alleged fact that models give access to possibilities fail. First, it seems that there are models that do not give access to possibilities, for what they describe is impossible. Secondly, it appears that having access to a possibility is epistemically and…Read more
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501Nagelian Reduction Beyond the Nagel ModelPhilosophy of Science 78 (3): 353-375. 2011.Nagel’s official model of theory-reduction and the way it is represented in the literature are shown to be incompatible with the careful remarks on the notion of reduction Nagel gave while developing his model. Based on these remarks, an alternative model is outlined which does not face some of the problems the official model faces. Taking the context in which Nagel developed his model into account, it is shown that the way Nagel shaped his model and, thus, its well-known deficiencies, are best …Read more
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18Cognitive Significance and Epistemic IntensionsLogique Et Analyse 54 (216). 2011.In this paper I discuss an important aspect of David Chalmers' interpretation of two-dimensional semantics. I will argue that his approach cannot be used to model something like Fregean sense: Semantic concepts similar to the notion of a sense do not, unlike the notion of an epistemic intension, depend on epistemological notions like apriority or acceptability on purely rational grounds. This conceptual difference gives rise to the problem that primary intensions cannot do the work Fregean sense…Read more
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978Real Knowledge Undermining LuckLogos and Episteme 7 (3): 325-344. 2016.Based on the discussion of a novel version of the Barn County scenario, the paper argues for a new explication of knowledge undermining luck. In passing, an as yet undetected form of benign luck is identified.
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319Identity-Based Reduction and Reductive ExplanationPhilosophia Naturalis 47 (1-2): 183-219. 2010.In this paper, the relation between identity-based reduction and one specific sort of reductive explanation is considered. The notion of identity-based reduction is spelled out and its role in the reduction debate is sketched. An argument offered by Jaegwon Kim, which is supposed to show that identity-based reduction and reductive explanation are incompatible, is critically examined. From the discussion of this argument, some important consequences about the notion of reduction are pointed out.
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12Editorial - Second European Graduate School: Philosophy of Language, Mind and ScienceAbstracta 5 (2): 113-115. 2009.
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107The Natures of Types and Tokens: On the Metaphysical Commitments of Non-Reductive PhysicalismMetaphysica 15 (1): 219-237. 2014.Non-reductive physicalism has become the dominant view in the philosophy of mind. Some of its metaphysical underpinnings, however, have not been studied in detail yet. The present paper suggests that non-reductive physicalism is committed to a particular view on the connection between the natures of types and the natures of their tokens – thereby defending non-reductive physicalism against an argument recently put forward by Susan Schneider.
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74David Woodruff Smith et Amy L. Thomasson (dir.), Phenomenology and Philosophy of Mind, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2005, 322 pagesDavid Woodruff Smith et Amy L. Thomasson (dir.), Phenomenology and Philosophy of Mind, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2005, 322 pages (review)Philosophiques 36 (1): 257-259. 2009.
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113Prophets against Ockhamism. Or: why the hard fact/soft fact distinction is irrelevant to the problem of foreknowledgeInternational Journal for Philosophy of Religion 75 (2): 119-135. 2014.In this paper, a cognate of the problem of divine foreknowledge is introduced: the problem of the prophet’s foreknowledge. The latter cannot be solved referring to Ockhamism—the doctrine that divine foreknowledge could, at least in principle, be compatible with human freedom because God’s beliefs about future actions are merely soft facts, rather than hard facts about the past. Under the assumption that if Ockhamism can solve the problem of divine foreknowledge then it should also yield a soluti…Read more
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83Enhancing Beyond What Ought to be the Case - A Conceptual ClarificationBioethics 30 (6): 384-388. 2016.In order to do justice to the intuition that medical treatments as such do not form proper instances of bio-enhancement, as the notion is employed in the ethical debate, we should construe bio-enhancements as interventions, which do not aim at states that, other things being equal, ought to obtain. In the light of this clarification, we come to see that cases of moral enhancement are not covered by the notion of bio-enhancement, properly construed.
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111Identity, Language, and Mind. An Introduction to the Philosophy of John Perry (edited book)CSLI. 2012.As one of the world's most eminent living philosophers, John Perry has covered a remarkable breadth of subjects in his published work, including semantics, indexicality, self-knowledge, personal identity, and consciousness. Looking particularly at the way in which he deals with issues of self, communication, and reality, this volume is organized in seven chapters that highlight a different aspect of Perry's work on the intersection of these subjects. A fundamental work for students and scholars,…Read more