•  1
    Times as Abstractions
    In Adrian Bardon (ed.), The Future of the Philosophy of Time, Routledge. pp. 41--55. 2011.
    Instead of accepting instants of time as metaphysically basic entities, many philosophers regard them as abstractions from something else. There is the Russell-Whitehead view that times are maximal classes of simultaneous events; the linguistic ersatzer's proposal that times are maximally consistent sets of sentences or propositions; and the view that times are made up of temporal parts of material objects. This paper discusses the advantages and disadvantages of these various proposals and c…Read more
  •  163
    Is science first-order?
    Analysis 62 (4): 305-308. 2002.
    It is a popular view amongst some philosophers, most notably those with Quinean views about ontological commitment, that scientific theories are first-orderizable; that we can regiment all such theories in an extensional first-order language. I argue that this view is false, and that any acceptable account of science needs to take some modal notion as primitive.
  •  504
    Fatalism as a Metaphysical Thesis
    Manuscrito: Revista Internacional de FilosofĂ­a 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.