•  8
    Blanca Rodríguez Ruiz, Luísa Winter Pereira (eds.), Democracia no binaria. Reflexiones interdisciplinares sobre la des-sexualización de la ciudadanía (review)
    Derechos y Libertades: Revista de Filosofía del Derecho y derechos humanos 54 345-355. 2026.
  •  5
    How to Respond to Borderline Cases
    In Richard Dietz & Sebastiano Moruzzi (eds.), Cuts and clouds: vagueness, its nature, and its logic, Oxford University Press. pp. 327-340. 2010.
    Some philosophers seem to think that borderline cases provide further cases of apparent faultless disagreement. This chapter argues against such a suggestion. It contends that with respect to borderline cases, people typically do not respond by taking a view, in contrast to what is the case in genuine cases of apparent faultless disagreement. It shows that the claim of the chapter is indeed respected, and is accounted for by paradigm cases of semantic and epistemic views on the nature of vaguene…Read more
  •  9
    Por una filosofía del juicio
    Anales de la Cátedra Francisco Suárez 60 489-496. 2026.
    Este pequeño ensayo tiene como objetivo presentar el texto de Salvatore Satta El misterio del proceso, conferencia pronunciada en 1949, y a partir de la cual podemos interrogarnos por una filosofía del juicio. El juicio no es solo un mecanismo jurídico, sino un acontecimiento que revela la condición paradójica del derecho y del sujeto moderno. La palabra de la persona acusada se transforma en ruido burocrático, y el juicio se convierte en una pena en sí mismo, más allá de la sentencia. Se expone…Read more
  •  9
    Nomos/Anomos y la Fragilidad de Los Derechos
    Anales de la Cátedra Francisco Suárez 60 5-8. 2026.
  •  44
    La anomalía de la uniformidad
    Revista Disertaciones 8 (1-2): 75-96. 2019.
    La anomalía de la uniformidad plantea la forma como el poder que constituyen el saber y las prácticas sociales dan lugar a una serie de formas de vida habituales que, de ser violadas o transgredidas, dan paso a diversas formas de la monstruosidad. El monstruo es, más que una entidad, un operador conceptual que pone en evidencia las categorías, los cánones y formas habituales de la vida que una sociedad exige, forma, interioriza y difunde entre sus individuos a través de sus visiones del mundo. A…Read more
  • Presuppositions of Commonality: an Indexical Relativist Account of Disagreement
    In Manuel García-Carpintero & Max Kölbel (eds.), Relative truth, Oxford University Press. 2008.
  •  174
    How to Respond to Borderline Cases
    In Richard Dietz & Sebastiano Moruzzi (eds.), Cuts and clouds: vagueness, its nature, and its logic, Oxford University Press. 2010.
    Some philosophers seem to think that borderline cases provide further cases of apparent faultless disagreement. My aim here is to argue against such a suggestion. I claim that with respect to borderline cases, people typically do not respond by taking a view—unlike what is the case in genuine cases of apparent faultless disagreement. I argue that my claim is indeed respected and actually accounted for by paradigm cases of semantic and epistemic views on the nature of vagueness. And I also argue …Read more
  •  166
    People and places
    Noûs 58 (4): 1137-1155. 2024.
    Several authors have argued that socially significant places such as countries, cities and establishments are immaterial objects, despite their being spatially located. In contrast, we aim to defend a reductive materialist view of such entities, which identifies them with their physical territories or premises. Accordingly, these are all material objects; typically, aggregates of land and infrastructure. Admittedly, our terms for these entities may also sometimes be used to denote their associat…Read more
  •  244
    Presuppositions of Commonality
    In Manuel García-Carpintero & Max Kölbel (eds.), Relative truth, Oxford University Press. pp. 297-310. 2008.
    According to relativism, these appearances of faultless disagreement are to be endorsed. According to moderate relativism, this can be done within the general Kaplan-Lewis-Stalnaker two-dimensional framework, in which the basic semantic notion is that of a sentence s being true at a context c at the index i: it may in effect be the case that s is true at c but false at c∗. According to indexical relativism, this is so in virtue of the content of sentence s at c being different from that of s at c…Read more
  •  112
    Intersectionality as emergence
    Philosophical Studies 181 (6): 1455-1475. 2024.
    Intersectionality is the notion that concerns the complexity of the experiences of individuals in virtue of their belonging to multiple socially significant categories. One of its main insights is that the way society is structured around categories such as gender, race, sexuality, class, etc., produces distinctive and specific forms of discrimination and privilege for groups in the intersections. In this paper, we suggest conceiving intersectionality as a general metaphysical framework wherein …Read more
  •  27
    El artículo analiza la supervivencia de la metáfora orgánica en los inicios de la Modernidad, en contra de la tesis planteada por Norberto Bobbio según la cual el organicismo desaparece con la Modernidad. A partir del pensamiento de Hobbes, Rousseau, Beccaria y Sieyès, se demuestra errónea esta tesis y se muestra la vinculación entre la vieja metáfora y el moderno paradigma inmunitario.
  •  255
    Who Reclaims Slurs?
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 103 (3): 606-619. 2022.
    Reclamation is usually taken to be the phenomenon wherein in-groups employ a slur to express pride, foster camaraderie, or subvert discriminatory structures. We provide data showing that, under some special circumstances, out-groups successfully reclaim slurs too. Thus, the mainstream restriction to in-groups is merely an approximation of the correct extension of the phenomenon – of who does actually reclaim slurs. Removing any such stipulative restriction opens a path towards further theorizing…Read more
  • According to a popular, plausible, but also controversial view about the nature of vagueness, vagueness is a matter of semantic indecision. I show that, even if «I» is vague and the view of vagueness as semantic indecision is correct, I could be a material composite object all the same.
  •  290
    Groups as pluralities
    Synthese 198 (11): 10237-10271. 2020.
    We say that each social group is identical to its members. The group just is them; they just are the group. This view of groups as pluralities has tended to be swiftly rejected by social metaphysicians, if considered at all, mainly on the basis of two objections. First, it is argued that groups can change in membership, while pluralities cannot. Second, it is argued that different groups can have exactly the same members, while different pluralities cannot. We rebut these objections, and argue t…Read more
  •  60
    According to Jackson, Pettit & Smith, “restricted particularism” is not affected by their supervenience-based consideration against particularism but, they claim, suffer from a different difficulty, roughly that it would violate the platitude about moral argument that, in debating controversial moral issues, a central role is played by various similarity claims. I present a defense of “restricted particularism” from this objection, which accommodates the platitudinous character of the claim that…Read more
  •  41
    Kripke famously argued that the illusion of contingency cannot be explained away, in the case of consciousness, in the way it is explained away in the rest of familiar cases of necessary aposteriori statements. In a recent paper, Pérez Otero argues that there is an alternative way of explaining it a way, in terms of mere aposteriority. I argue against the exegetical accuracy and the truth of this contention.
  •  17
    Por qué la aposterioridad no (basta, según Kripke, ni) basta (Why Aposteriority Is Not (Enough according to Kripke, Nor Is) Enough)
    Theoria: Revista de Teoría, Historia y Fundamentos de la Ciencia 21 (3): 245-255. 2006.
    Es conocido que Kripke argumentó que la ilusión de contingencia en el caso de la conciencia no puede explicarse del modo en que se explica en el resto de casos familiares de enunciados necesarios a posteriori. En un artículo reciente, Pérez Otero (2002) argumenta que hay una explicación alternativa, en términos de mera aposterioridad. Argumento en contra de la corrección exegética y de la verdad de esta tesis.Kripke famously argued that the illusion of contingency cannot be explained away, in th…Read more
  •  192
    What does it take to enter into the circumstance?
    Philosophical Studies 159 (1). 2012.
    In the recent literature on contextualism and relativism, one often finds disputes as to which kind of consideration would be relevant for positing a feature of a context as a parameter in the ‘‘circumstance of evaluation’: via the presence of an operator in the language which shifts that feature (Stanley) or by being a feature of a context with respect to which the truth of ‘‘propositions’’ expressed in the context is relative (McFarlane). This kind of dispute arises from two different independ…Read more
  •  244
    Defending "Restricted Particularism" from Jackson, Pettit & Smith
    Theoria: Revista de Teoría, Historia y Fundamentos de la Ciencia 23 (2). 2008.
    According to Jackson, Pettit & Smith , “restricted particularism” is not affected by their supervenience-based consideration against particularism but, they claim, suffer from a different difficulty, roughly that it would violate the platitude about moral argument that, in debating controversial moral issues, a central role is played by various similarity claims. I present a defense of “restricted particularism” from this objection, which accommodates the platitudinous character of the claim tha…Read more
  •  5
    Review of Crispin Wright, Saving the Differences: Essays on Themes from Truth and Objectivity (review)
    Teorema: International Journal of Philosophy 24 (2): 125-129. 2005.
    Review of *Saving the Differences* by Crispin Wright.
  •  248
    Disjunctions, Conjunctions, and their Truthmakers
    Mind 118 (470): 417-425. 2009.
    Gonzalo Rodriguez-Pereyra (2006) argues against attempts to preserve the entailment principle (or a restriction of it) while avoiding the explosion of truthmakers for necessities and truthmaker triviality. In doing so, he both defends the disjunction thesis--if something makes true a disjunctive truth, then it makes true one of its disjuncts--, and rejects the conjunction thesis--if something makes tue a conjunctive truth, then it makes true each of its conjuncts. In my discussion, I provide pla…Read more
  •  35
    Response to Max Kölbel: "A Criterion for Objectivity", Theoria. Revista de Teoría, Historia y Fundamentos de la Ciencia: Volume > 15 > Issue: 2
  •  90
    The Non-circularity Constraint: Peacocke vs. Peacocke
    Teorema: International Journal of Philosophy 22 (1-2): 85-93. 2003.
    According to the view that Peacocke elaborates in A Study of Concepts (1992), a concept can be individuated by providing the conditions a thinker must satisfy in order to possess that concept. Hence possessions conditions for concepts should be specifiable in a way that respects a non-circularity constraint. In a more recent paper “Implicit Conceptions, Understanding and Rationality” (1998a) Peacocke argues against his former view, in the light of the phenomenon of rationally accepting principle…Read more
  •  90
    Donald Smith (2006) argues that if ‘I’ is indeed vague, and the view of vagueness as semantic indecision correct after all, then ‘I’ cannot refer to a composite material object. But his considerations would, if sound, also establish that ‘Tibbles,’ ‘Everest,’ or ‘Toronto,’ do not refer to composite material objects either—nor hence, presumably, to cats, mountains, or cities. And they can be resisted, anyway. Or so I argue.
  •  234
    Reponse to Peter Milne (2005)'s argument agaist maximalism about truthmaking.
  •  170
    What are things like the Supreme Court? Gabriel Uzquiano has defended that they are groups, entities which are somehow composed of members (at certain times) but which, unlike sets (or pluralities), allow for fluctuation in membership. The main alternative holds that 'the Supreme Court' refers (at any time) to the set (or plurality) of their members (at the time). Uzquiano motivates his view by posing a metaphysical puzzle for this reductive alternative. I argue that a parallel reasoning would a…Read more
  •  174
    Is 'everything' precise?
    Dialectica 60 (4). 2006.
    There are certain metaphysically interesting arguments ‘from vagueness’, for unrestricted mereological composition and for four-dimensionalism, which involve a claim to the effect that idioms for unrestricted quantification are precise. An elaboration of Lewis’ argument for this claim, which assumes the view of vagueness as semantic indecision, is presented. It is argued that the argument also works according to other views on the nature of vagueness, which also require for an expression to be v…Read more
  •  112
    Rigidity for predicates and the trivialization problem
    Philosophers' Imprint 8 1-13. 2008.
    According to the simple proposal about rigidity for predicates, a predicate is rigid (roughly) if it signifies the same property across the relevant worlds. Recent critics claim that this suffers from a trivialization problem: any predicate whatsoever would turn out to be trivially rigid, according to the proposal. In this paper a corresponding "problem" for ordinary singular terms is considered. A natural solution is provided by intuitions concerning the actual truth-value of identity statement…Read more
  •  175
    After presenting a negative characterization of metaphysical vagueness and the main tenets of the view of vagueness as semantic indecision, the paper critically discusses the objection that such a view requires that at least some vagueness not be just constituted by semantic indecision—but rather by the metaphysical vagueness of some semantic relations themselves submitted by Trenton Merricks and, more recently, Nathan Salmon.
  •  202
    Relativizing utterance-truth?
    Synthese 170 (1): 1-5. 2009.
    In recent years, some people have held that a radical relativist position is defensible in some philosophically interesting cases, including future contingents, predicates of personal taste, evaluative predicates in general, epistemic modals, and knowledge attributions. The position is frequently characterized as denying that utterance-truth is absolute. I argue that this characterization is inappropriate, as it requires a metaphysical substantive contention with which moderate views as such nee…Read more