•  4
    Nature and Understanding: The Metaphysics and Method of Science (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 55 (4): 873-874. 2002.
    Rescher is one of the very few contemporary philosophers offering an all-encompassing system. Here, with Rescher’s famous clarity, we have an exposition of much of this unique system in the course of an investigation into how much hope we can have for a systematic scientifically informed understanding of nature.
  •  4
    Programs, bugs, DNA and a design argument
    In Yujin Nagasawa & Erik J. Wielenberg (eds.), New waves in philosophy of religion, Palgrave-macmillan. 2008.
  •  2
    Divine Creative Freedom
    Oxford Studies in Philosophy of Religion 7 213-238. 2016.
  •  2
    PSR and Probabilities
    Oxford Studies in Metaphysics 10. 2017.
  •  1
    I argue that standard functionalism leads to absurd conclusions as to the number of minds that would exist in the universe if persons were duplicated. Rather than yielding the conclusion that making a molecule-by-molecule copy of a material person would result in two persons, it leads to the conclusion that three persons, or perhaps only one person, would result. This is absurd and standard functionalism should be abandoned. Social varieties of functionalism fare no better, though there is an Ar…Read more
  •  1
              The production of a number of vaccines involves the use of cell-lines originally derived from fetuses directly aborted in the 1960s and 1970s. Such cell-lines, indeed sometimes the very same ones, are important to on-going research, including at Catholic institutions. The cells currently used are removed by a number of decades and by a significant number of cellular generations from the original cells. Moreover, the original cells extracted from the bodies of the aborted f…Read more
  •  1
    Leibniz's Approach to Individuation and Strawson's Criticisms
    Studia Leibnitiana 30 (1): 116-123. 1998.
    P. F. Strawson a critiqué le compte de Leibniz de 1'individuation, en demandant pourquoi il est métaphysiquement impossible pour qu'il y ait des consciences indiscernables mais distincts. L'analogie entre la conscience et la monade est centrale pour Leibniz, et done la critique de Strawson met en question la nécessité métaphysique du principe de l'identité des indiscernables . Par un examen de quelques questions dans le système ontologique de Leibniz, nous défendrons la nécessité métaphysique du…Read more
  • Other Times (review)
    Dialogue 39 (1): 199-201. 2000.
  • Book Review (review)
    Philosophia Christi 7 (1): 209-212. 2005.
  • What animals might there be in heaven?
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly. forthcoming.