•  505
    Fatalism as a Metaphysical Thesis
    Manuscrito: Revista Internacional de Filosofía 39 (4). 2016.
    Even though fatalism has been an intermittent topic of philosophy since Greek antiquity, this paper argues that fate ought to be of little concern to metaphysicians. Fatalism is neither an interesting metaphysical thesis in its own right, nor can it be identified with theses that are, such as realism about the future or determinism.
  •  90
    Dummett on the Time-Continuum
    Philosophy 80 (311). 2005.
    Michael Dummett claims that the classical model of time as a continuum of instants has to be rejected. In his view, “it allows as possibilities what reason rules out, and leaves it to the contingent laws of physics to rule out what a good model of physical reality would not even be able to describe.” This paper argues otherwise
  •  59
    Time and Modality
    In Craig Callender (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Time, Oxford University Press. pp. 91--121. 2011.
    With the rigorous development of modal logic in the first half of the twentieth century, it became custom amongst philosophers to characterize different views about necessity and possibility in terms of rival axiomatic systems for the modal operators ‘ ’ (‘possibly’) and ‘ ’ (‘necessarily’). From the late 1950s onwards, Arthur Prior began to argue that temporal distinctions ought to be given a similar treatment, in terms of axiomatic systems for sentential tense operators, such as ‘P’ (‘it was the…Read more