•  149
    Cambridge changes of color
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 81 (2): 142-164. 2000.
    Locke’s porphyry argument at 2.8.19 of the Essay has not been properly appreciated. On my reconstruction, Locke argues from the premise that porphyry undergoes a mere Cambridge change of color in different lighting conditions to the conclusion that porphyry’s colors do not belong to it as it is in itself. I argue that his argument is not quite sound, but it would be if Locke chose a different stone, alexandrite. Examining his argument teaches us something about the relation between explanatory q…Read more
  •  91
    Annotations to the Speech of the Muses (Plato Republic 546b-c)
    with Kathleen McNamee
    Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik 144 31-50. 2003.
    Annotations to the Speech of the Muses (Plato Republic 546b-c).
  •  136
    'If a person can think of an F, then that person has come into causal contact with an F in the right way' is a premise in an obvious reconstruction of Putnam's argument that we are not brains in vats. 'If a person can think of an F, then that person has come into causal contact with an F or with something at least as good as an F' is the only controversial premise in Descartes' argument for the existence of God. Putnam's principle entails Descartes', which suggests that we should enquire after b…Read more