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173Laws and possibilitiesPhilosophy of Science 71 (5): 719-729. 2004.The initial part of this paper explores and rejects three standard views of how scientific laws might be systematically connected with physical necessity or possibility. The first concerns laws and their consequences, the second concerns the so‐called counterfactual connection, and the third concerns a possible worlds construction of physical necessity. The remaining part introduces a neglected notion of possibility, and, with the aid of some examples, illustrates the special way in which laws r…Read more
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66Thinking Matter: Materialism in Eighteenth-Century Britain. John W. YoltonIsis 77 (1): 115-116. 1986.
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The Road to Universal Logic: Festschrift for 50th Birthday of Jean-Yves Béziauvol. 1, Cham, Heidelberg, etc.: Springer-Birkhäuser (edited book)Springer-Birkhäuser. 2015.
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The Changeless Order--The Physics of Space, Time and MotionBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 20 (4): 371-372. 1969.
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29Laws, explanations and the reduction of possibilitiesIn Hallvard Lillehammer & Gonzalo Rodriguez-Pereyra (eds.), Real Metaphysics: Essays in Honour of D. H. Mellor, With His Replies., Routledge. pp. 169--183. 2002.
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120Structuralist logic: Implications, inferences, and consequences (review)Logica Universalis 1 (1): 167-181. 2007.. On a structuralist account of logic, the logical operators, as well as modal operators are defined by the specific ways that they interact with respect to implication. As a consequence, the same logical operator (conjunction, negation etc.) can appear to be very different with a variation in the implication relation of a structure. We illustrate this idea by showing that certain operators that are usually regarded as extra-logical concepts (Tarskian algebraic operations on theories, mereologi…Read more
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103The Explanation of Laws: Some Unfinished BusinessJournal of Philosophy 109 (8-9): 479-502. 2012.
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Ontological and Ideological Issues of the Classical theory of Space and TimeIn Peter K. Machamer & Robert G. Turnbull (eds.), Motion and Time, Space and Matter, Ohio State University Press. pp. 224--263. 1976.
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103The Representational Inadequacy of Ramsey SentencesTheoria 72 (2): 100-125. 2006.We canvas a number of past uses of Ramsey sentences which have yielded disappointing results, and then consider three very interesting recent attempts to deploy them for a Ramseyan Dialetheist theory of truth, a modal account of laws and theories, and a criterion for the existence of factual properties. We think that once attention is given to the specific kinds of theories that Ramsey had in mind, it becomes evident that their Ramsey sentences are not the best ways of presenting those theories.
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