University of Oxford
Faculty of Philosophy
DPhil, 1978
St Andrews, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Interest
Medieval Logic
  •  450
    Truthmakers and the disjunction thesis
    Mind 109 (432): 67-80. 2000.
    The correspondence theory of truth has experienced something of a revival recently in the form of the Truthmaker Axiom: whatever is true, something makes it true. We consider various postulates which have been proposed to characterize truthmaking, in particular, the Disjunction Thesis (DT), that whatever makes a disjunction true must make one or other disjunct true. In conjunction with certain other assumptions, DT leads to triviality. We show that there are elaborations of truthmaking on which …Read more
  •  146
    `Exists' is a predicate
    Mind 89 (355): 412-417. 1980.
  •  114
    Review of J.c.Beall, Greg Restall, Logical Pluralism (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2006 (5). 2006.
  •  215
    Completeness and categoricity: Frege, gödel and model theory
    History and Philosophy of Logic 18 (2): 79-93. 1997.
    Frege’s project has been characterized as an attempt to formulate a complete system of logic adequate to characterize mathematical theories such as arithmetic and set theory. As such, it was seen to fail by Gödel’s incompleteness theorem of 1931. It is argued, however, that this is to impose a later interpretation on the word ‘complete’ it is clear from Dedekind’s writings that at least as good as interpretation of completeness is categoricity. Whereas few interesting first-order mathematical th…Read more
  •  37
    Best Paper Award
    History and Philosophy of Logic 32 (3): 197-197. 2011.
  •  46
  •  131
    A survey of the life of Hugh MacColl (1837-1909)
    with Michael Astroh and Ivor Grattan-Guinness
    History and Philosophy of Logic 22 (2): 81-98. 2001.
    The Scottish logician Hugh MacColl is well known for his innovative contributions to modal and nonclassical logics. However, until now little biographical information has been available about his academic and cultural background, his personal and professional situation, and his position in the scientific community of the Victorian era. The present article reports on a number of recent findings
  •  101
    Logical consequence as truth-preservation
    Logique and Analyse 183 (4): 479-493. 2003.
    t is often suggested that truth-preservation is insufficient for logical consequence, and that consequence needs to satisfy a further condition of relevance. Premises and conclusion in a valid consequence must be relevant to one another, and truth-preservation is too coarse-grained a notion to guarantee that. Thus logical consequence is the intersection of truth-preservation and relevance. This situation has the absurd consequence that one might concede that the conclusion of an arg…Read more
  •  236
    The unity of the fact
    Philosophy 80 (3): 317-342. 2005.
    What binds the constituents of a state of affairs together and provides unity to the fact they constitute? I argue that the fact that they are related is basic and fundamental. This is the thesis of Factualism: the world is a world of facts. I draw three corollaries: first, that the Identity of truth is mistaken, in conflating what represents (the proposition) with what is represented (the fact). Secondly, a popular interpretation of Wittgenstein's Tractatus, due to Steinus, whereby false propos…Read more
  •  65
    A survey of the life of Hugh MacColl (1837-1909)
    with Michael Astroh and Ivor Grattan-Guinness
    Philosophia Scientiae 1 (15-1): 7-29. 2011.
    Le logicien écossais Hugh MacColl est bien connu pour ses contributions innovantes aux logiques modales et non-classiques. Cependant, jusque-là, nous disposions de peu d’informations biographiques sur son cheminement académique et culturel, sa situation personnelle et professionnelle, et sa position au sein de la communauté scientifique de la période victorienne. Le présent article présente un certain nombre de découvertes récentes à ce sujet. The Scottish logician Hugh MacColl is well known for…Read more
  •  61
  •  164
    The Medieval Theory of Consequence
    Synthese 187 (3): 899-912. 2012.
    The recovery of Aristotle’s logic during the twelfth century was a great stimulus to medieval thinkers. Among their own theories developed to explain Aristotle’s theories of valid and invalid reasoning was a theory of consequence, of what arguments were valid, and why. By the fourteenth century, two main lines of thought had developed, one at Oxford, the other at Paris. Both schools distinguished formal from material consequence, but in very different ways. In Buridan and his followers in Paris,…Read more
  •  133
    Field's Paradox and Its Medieval Solution
    History and Philosophy of Logic 31 (2): 161-176. 2010.
    Hartry Field's revised logic for the theory of truth in his new book, Saving Truth from Paradox , seeking to preserve Tarski's T-scheme, does not admit a full theory of negation. In response, Crispin Wright proposed that the negation of a proposition is the proposition saying that some proposition inconsistent with the first is true. For this to work, we have to show that this proposition is entailed by any proposition incompatible with the first, that is, that it is the weakest proposition inco…Read more
  •  178
    Semantic pollution and syntactic purity
    Review of Symbolic Logic 8 (4): 649-661. 2015.
    Logical inferentialism claims that the meaning of the logical constants should be given, not model-theoretically, but by the rules of inference of a suitable calculus. It has been claimed that certain proof-theoretical systems, most particularly, labelled deductive systems for modal logic, are unsuitable, on the grounds that they are semantically polluted and suffer from an untoward intrusion of semantics into syntax. The charge is shown to be mistaken. It is argued on inferentialist grounds tha…Read more
  •  75
    Concepts and Meaning in Medieval Philosophy
    Philosophy and Theology 8 1-20. 1999.
    In his recent study, Concepts, Fodor identifies five nonnegotiable constraints on any theory of concepts. These theses were all shared by the standard medieval theories of concepts. However, those theories were cognitivist, in contrast with Fodor’s: concepts are definitions, a form of natural knowledge. The medieval theories were formed under two influences, from Aristotle by way of Boethius, and from Augustine. The tension between them resulted in the Ockhamist notion of a natural language, con…Read more
  •  3
    Quotation and Reach's Puzzle
    Acta Analytica 12 9--20. 1997.
  •  163
    Hypertasks
    with Peter Clark
    Synthese 61 (3): 387-390. 1984.
  •  62
    Late‐Scholastic and Humanist Theories of the Proposition
    Philosophical Books 23 (1): 16-17. 1982.
  •  42
    The Syllogism
    Philosophical Books 24 (1): 14-15. 1983.
  •  76
    John Buridan’s Theory of Consequence and His Octagons of Opposition
    In Jean-Yves Béziau & Dale Jacquette (eds.), Around and Beyond the Square of Opposition, Springer Verlag. pp. 93--110. 2012.
    One of the manuscripts of Buridan’s Summulae contains three figures, each in the form of an octagon. At each node of each octagon there are nine propositions. Buridan uses the figures to illustrate his doctrine of the syllogism, revising Aristotle's theory of the modal syllogism and adding theories of syllogisms with propositions containing oblique terms (such as ‘man’s donkey’) and with ‘propositions of non-normal construction’ (where the predicate precedes the copula). O-propositions of non-no…Read more
  •  21
    Hugh MacColl and the algebra of strict implication
    Nordic Journal of Philosophical Logic 3 59-84. 1998.
  •  60
    The Bounds of Logic. A Generalized Viewpoint (review)
    Philosophical Books 34 (3): 158-160. 1993.
  •  50
    Epistemic Logic in the Later Middle Ages
    Philosophical Books 36 (2): 102-104. 1995.
    This is a book review of 'Epistemic Logic in the Later Middle Ages' by Ivan Boh.
  •  248
    How Is Material Supposition Possible?
    Journal of Nietzsche Studies 8 (1): 1-20. 1999.
    I. SUPPOSITION AND SIGNIFICATIONIn an insightful article on the medieval theory of supposition, Elizabeth Karger noted a remarkable development in the characterization of the material mode of supposition between William of Ockham and his contemporaries in the early fourteenth century and Paul of Venice and others at the turn of the fifteenth century.1. E. Karger, “La Supposition Materielle comme Supposition Significative: Paul de Venise, Paul de Pergula,” in A. Maierú, ed., English Logic in Ital…Read more
  •  1
    Bradwardine's revenge
    In J. C. Beall (ed.), , Oxford University Press. 2009.
  •  89
    Paradoxes of Signification
    New Content is Available for Vivarium. 2018.
    _ Source: _Page Count 21 Ian Rumfitt has recently drawn our attention to a couple of paradoxes of signification, claiming that although Thomas Bradwardine’s “multiple-meanings” account of truth and signification can solve the first of them, it cannot solve the second. The paradoxes of signification were in fact much discussed by Bradwardine’s successors in the fourteenth century. Bradwardine’s solution appears to turn on a distinction between the principal and the consequential signification of …Read more