Harvard University
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1963
Eugene, Oregon, United States of America
Areas of Interest
Epistemology
Metaphysics
  •  82
    Hypothetical Cases and Abortion
    Social Theory and Practice 13 (1): 17-48. 1987.
  •  121
    The Unbearable Vagueness of Being
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 34 (4): 471-492. 2010.
  •  122
    The Liar Parody
    Philosophy 63 (243): 43-62. 1988.
    The Liar Paradox is a philosophical bogyman. It refuses to die, despite everything that philosophers have done to kill it. Sometimes the attacks on it seem little more than expressions of positivist petulance, as when the Liar sentence is said to be nonsense or meaningless. Sometimes the attacks are based on administering to the Liar sentence arbitrary if not unfair tests for admitting of truth or falsity that seem designed expressly to keep it from qualifying. Some philosophers have despaired o…Read more
  •  295
    The Case of the Missing Premise
    Informal Logic 17 (1). 1995.
    This paper suggests that the flaw in the enthymeme approach to argument analysis is in the requirement, as I come to formulate it, that an argument be restated as a premises-and-conclusion sequence. The paper begins by investigating how logicians show that there are problems with the enthymeme approach. That investigation reveals a failure on the part of logicians to appreciate the importance of the rhetorical context of an argument. This failure, it is argued, is a consequence of what I refer t…Read more
  •  71
    In Defense of Informal Logic
    Philosophy and Rhetoric 20 (4). 1987.
  •  140
    Elster on the emotions
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 43 (3): 359-378. 2000.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  214
    Against the logicians
    The Philosophers' Magazine 51 (51): 80-86. 2010.
    Logic as a subject has existed for a long time. Aristotle and the Stoics identified some of its principles, as did Indian logicians. And this ancient logic underwent an extraordinary mathematical development in the last hundred and fifty years. So logic certainly exists, at least as a branch of mathematics. The question is whether it is anything more than that.
  •  72
    The Power of Powerlessness
    Philosophical Investigations 39 (2): 237-253. 2016.
    Philosophers should forget what they think they know about divine assistance, power, control, up-to-usness, freedom-from and free will, when it comes to alcoholism, given what Alcoholics Anonymous says. Alcoholics will never be free of their alcoholism; although it is up to them to acknowledge their powerlessness over alcohol, often that is not possible until they hit bottom, and even then they might not acquire the power of powerlessness without help from a Higher Power. After explaining and de…Read more
  •  194
  •  65
  •  150
    An argumentative passage that might appear to be an instance of denying the antecedent will generally admit of an alternative interpretation, one on which the conditional contained by the passage is a preface to the argument rather than a premise of it. On this interpretation. which generally is a more charitable one, the conditional plays a certain dialectical role and, in some cases, a rhetorical role as welL Assuming only a very weak principle of exigetical charity, I consider what it would t…Read more
  •  61
    Why do illiterates do so badly in Logic?
    Philosophical Investigations 19 (1): 34-54. 1996.
  •  224
    The ad baculum is not a fallacy in an argument, but is offered instead of an argument to put an end to further argument. This claim is the basis for criticizing Michael Wreen's "neo-traditionalism," which yields misreadings of supposed cases of the ad baculum because of its rejection of any consideration of what the person using the ad baculum, or someone who refers to that use as an "argument," is doing. The paper concludes with reflections on the values that should inform talk of a fallacy in …Read more