-
LibertarianismIn Michael J. Loux & Dean W. Zimmerman (eds.), The Oxford handbook of metaphysics, Oxford University Press. pp. 587-612. 2003.
-
51Causal Theories in EpistemologyIn Jonathan Dancy & Ernest Sosa (eds.), Blackwell's A Companion to Epistemology, Blackwell. 1992.
-
38The Justification of Belief: A PrimerIn Carl Ginet & Sydney Shoemaker (eds.), Knowledge and Mind: Essays Presented to Norman Malcolm, Oxford Univresity Press. 1983.
-
144Reasons Explanation: Further Defense of a Non-causal AccountThe Journal of Ethics 20 (1): 219-228. 2016.If moral responsibility requires uncaused action, as I believe, and if a reasons explanation of an action must be a causal explanation, as many philosophers of action suppose, then it follows that our responsible actions are ones we do for no reason, which is preposterous. In previous work I have argued against the second premise of this deduction, claiming that the statement that a person did A in order to satisfy their desire D will be true if the person, while doing A, intended of that action…Read more
-
98An Incoherence in the TractatusCanadian Journal of Philosophy 3 (2): 143-151. 1973.In rejecting, In 1929-30, The complete independence of the elementary propositions--According to which any combination of truth-Values for any set of elementary propositions is logically possible--Wittgenstein did not reject an essential element of the "tractatus" system but rather one that fails to cohere with the central picture-Theory of propositions, According to which a method of truth-Valued representation must be capable of presenting 'competing alternative' representations, The false one…Read more
-
On Wittgenstein's Claim that There Could Not Be Just One Occasion of Obeying a RuleActa Philosophica Fennica 28 154-165. 1976.
-
803Self-EvidenceLogos and Episteme 1 (2): 325-352. 2010.ABSTRACT: This paper develops an account of what it is for a proposition to be self- evident to someone, based on the idea that certain propositions are such that to fully understand them is to believe them. It argues that when a proposition p is self-evident to one, one has non-inferential a priori justification for believing that p and, a welcome feature, a justification that does not involve exercising any special sort of intuitive faculty; if, in addition, it is true that p and there exists …Read more
-
2Infinitism is Not the Answer to the Regress ProblemIn Matthias Steup & John Turri (eds.), Contemporary Debates in Epistemology, Wiley-blackwell. 2013.
-
96Four Difficulties with Dretske's Theory of KnowledgeBehavioral and Brain Sciences 6 (1): 69-70. 1983.Four difficulties with Dretske's theory of knowledge
-
100Comments on Alfred Mele, Motivation and Agency – DiscussionPhilosophical Studies 123 (3): 261-272. 2005.
-
954The conditional analysis of freedomIn P. van Inwagen (ed.), Time and Cause: Essays Presented to Richard Taylor, Reidel. pp. 171-186. 1980.
-
260
-
194Book Review. Teleological realism. Scott Sehon. (review)Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 76 (3). 2008.No Abstract
-
247Reasons explanation of action: An incompatibilist accountPhilosophical Perspectives 3 17-46. 1989.
-
106Infinitism is not the solution to the regress problemIn Matthias Steup & John Turri (eds.), Contemporary Debates in Epistemology, Wiley-blackwell. pp. 140--149. 2013.
-
412Freedom, responsibility, and agencyThe Journal of Ethics 1 (1): 85-98. 1997.This paper first distinguishes three alternative views that adherents to both incompatibilism and PAP may take as to what constitutes an agent''s determining or controlling her action (if it''s not the action''s being deterministically caused by antecedent events): the indeterministic-causation view, the agent-causation view, and "simple indeterminism." The bulk of the paper focusses on the dispute between simple indeterminism - the view that the occurrence of a simple mental event is determined…Read more
-
51Castaneda on Private LanguageIn James E. Tomberlin (ed.), Agent, Language, and the Structure of the World: Essays Presented to Hector-Neri Castaneda With His Replies, Hackett. 1983.
-
243The dispositionalist solution to Wittgenstein's problem about understanding a rule: Answering Kripke's objectionMidwest Studies in Philosophy 17 (1): 53-73. 1992.The paper explicates a version of dispositionalism and defends it against Kripke's objections (in his "Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language") that 1) it leaves out the normative aspect of a rule, 2) it cannot account for the directness of the knowledge one has of what one meant, and 3) regarding rules for computable functions of numbers, a) there are numbers beyond one's capacity to consider and b) there are people who are disposed to make systematic mistakes in computing values of functio…Read more
-
7Reasons explanations of action: Causalist versus noncausalist accountsIn Robert Kane (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Free Will, Oxford University Press. pp. 386-405. 2001.
Ithaca, New York, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Epistemology |
| Philosophy of Action |
Areas of Interest
| Metaphysics |
| Philosophy of Language |
| Philosophy of Mind |