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51Review of Richard Holton, Willing, Wanting, Waiting (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (11). 2009.
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LibertarianismIn Michael J. Loux & Dean W. Zimmerman (eds.), The Oxford handbook of metaphysics, Oxford University Press. pp. 587-612. 2003.
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51Causal Theories in EpistemologyIn Jonathan Dancy & Ernest Sosa (eds.), Blackwell's A Companion to Epistemology, Blackwell. 1992.
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38The Justification of Belief: A PrimerIn Carl Ginet & Sydney Shoemaker (eds.), Knowledge and Mind: Essays Presented to Norman Malcolm, Oxford Univresity Press. 1983.
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99An 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
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145Reasons 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
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On Wittgenstein's Claim that There Could Not Be Just One Occasion of Obeying a RuleActa Philosophica Fennica 28 154-165. 1976.
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808Self-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
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2Infinitism is Not the Answer to the Regress ProblemIn Matthias Steup & John Turri (eds.), Contemporary Debates in Epistemology, Wiley-blackwell. 2013.
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96Four Difficulties with Dretske's Theory of KnowledgeBehavioral and Brain Sciences 6 (1): 69-70. 1983.Four difficulties with Dretske's theory of knowledge
Ithaca, New York, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Epistemology |
| Philosophy of Action |
Areas of Interest
| Metaphysics |
| Philosophy of Language |
| Philosophy of Mind |