•  227
    The hybrid theory of mixed quotation
    Mind 107 (427): 661-664. 1998.
  •  327
    How to Forget that 'Know' is Factive
    Acta Analytica 27 (4): 449-459. 2012.
    This paper examines, and rejects, a recent argument to the effect that knowledge is not truth-entailing, i.e. that “know” is not factive.
  •  182
    A Purported Refutation of Some Theories of Assertion
    Philosophical Forum 45 (2): 169-177. 2014.
    Several influential philosophical accounts of assertion have recently been claimed by Peter Pagin to commit a fundamental mistake. The present paper argues that Pagin's defence of that claim is flawed: The criterion he proposes for evaluating theories of assertion is unreliable; and even if it were supposed to be in itself reliable, it could not be used, in the way he proposes, either against the kinds of theories he intends to undermine or in favour of the kind of theory he intends to support.
  •  1525
    The Distance Between “Here” and “Where I Am”
    Journal of Philosophical Research 40 13-21. 2015.
    This paper argues that Michael Dummett's proposed distinction between a declarative sentence's "assertoric content" and "ingredient sense" is not in fact supported by what Dummett presents as paradigmatic evidence in its support.
  •  114
    Emotional states and linguistic events: A study of conceptual misconnections
    Pragmatics and Cognition 1 (2): 229-243. 1993.
    This paper intends to contribute to the evaluation of the project of analyzing speech act concepts in terms of mental state concepts, by examining Searle's and Vanderveken's proposed analyses of certain types of illocutionary acts as expressions of corresponding types of emotional states. It is argued that the proposed analyses are all defective, that the assumptions about underlying speech act/mental state parallelisms from which their initial plausibility might be taken to derive are themselve…Read more
  •  91
    A memorable thirteen-word sentence
    Semiotica 2015 (204): 95-99. 2015.
    The most distinctive, and probably the most striking, assumption of Donald Davidson's well known ‘paratactic’ analysis of the logical form of saying ascriptions is that the “that”-clause that, in such an ascription, specifies the content of the ascribed act of saying, is neither syntactically nor semantically part of the sentence effecting the ascription. The present paper identifies a neglected problem that this assumption engenders for the Davidsonian analysis. The problem arises in connection…Read more