•  113
    Tim, Tom, Time and Fate: Lewis on Time Travel
    Analytic Philosophy 57 (3): 247-252. 2016.
    In his well-known time travel story, David Lewis claims that there is a sense in which Tim can go back in time and kill his Grandfather and a (more inclusive) sense in which he cannot. Lewis describes Tim’s predicament as semi-fatalist, but holds that this does not compromise Tim’s freedom or his ability to kill Grandfather. I argue that if semi-fatalism is true of Tim, it is true of everyone, and that this is a troubling conclusion.
  •  95
    On the Epistemic Bilking Argument
    Thought: A Journal of Philosophy 4 (3): 139-140. 2015.
    The standard bilking argument is well-known and attempts to prove the impossibility of backwards causation. In this discussion note, I identify an epistemic bilking argument, which has not received sufficient attention in the literature, and indicate how best to respond to it. This response involves a parity argument based on a forwards causation case
  •  120
  •  7
    Elementary Logic
    Routledge. 2012.
    Elementary Logic explains what logic is, how it is done, and why it can be exciting. The book covers the central part of logic that all students have to learn: propositional logic. It aims to provide a crystal-clear introduction to what is often regarded as the most technically difficult area in philosophy. The book opens with an explanation of what logic is and how it is constructed. Subsequent chapters take the reader step-by-step through all aspects of elementary logic. Throughout, ideas are …Read more
  •  1
    Persons and human beings
    Logos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España]. forthcoming.
  •  107
    Black on Backwards Causation
    Thought: A Journal of Philosophy 3 (3): 230-233. 2014.
    In this discussion paper I argue that Max Black's well-known bilking argument does not succeed in showing the impossibility of backwards causation
  •  36
    Some Remarks on Backwards Causation
    Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 71 (4): 695-704. 2015.
    Resumo Neste texto, o autor concentra-se em dois artigos históricos: o de Max Black “Why cannot an effect precede its cause”? e o de Michael Dummett “Bringing about the Past”. O autor irá mostrar onde falha o “bilking argument” de Black, contra a possibilidade da causalidade invertida. Por conseguinte, o autor irá concordar com Dummett, na possibilidade de um agente actuar a fim de que algo possa ocorrer no passado, contudo, discordando da argumentação de Dummett face a um desafio céptico, que t…Read more
  •  37
    Identity and extrinsicness
    Mind 97 (385): 105-109. 1988.