•  1
    Philosophy of Cosmology: an Introduction (edited book)
    with A. Ijjas
    Oxford University Press. forthcoming.
  •  74
    A companion to David Lewis (edited book)
    Wiley-Blackwell. 2015.
    In _A Companion to David Lewis_, Barry Loewer and Jonathan Schaffer bring together top philosophers to explain, discuss, and critically extend Lewis's seminal work in original ways. Students and scholars will discover the underlying themes and complex interconnections woven through the diverse range of his work in metaphysics, philosophy of language, logic, epistemology, philosophy of science, philosophy of mind, ethics, and aesthetics. The first and only comprehensive study of the work of David…Read more
  • Physicalism and its Discontents (edited book)
    . 2001.
  •  115
  •  24
    Comments on Jaegwon Kim’s M ind and the Physical World
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 65 (3): 655-662. 2002.
    NRP is a family of views differing by how they understand “reduction” and “physicalism.” Following Kim I understand the non-reduction as holding that some events and properties are distinct from any physical events and properties. A necessary condition for physicalism is that mental properties, events, and laws supervene on physical ones. Kim allows various understandings of “supervenience” but I think that physicalism requires at least the claim that any minimal physical duplicate of the actual…Read more
  • Knowledge, Names, and Necessity
    Dissertation, Stanford University. 1975.
  •  237
    Mind matters
    with Ernest Le Pore
    Journal of Philosophy 84 (11). 1987.
  •  43
    Help for the good samaritan paradox
    Philosophical Studies 50 (1). 1986.
  •  21
    Preface
    Synthese 70 (2): 157-157. 1987.
  •  82
    Dyadic deontic detachment
    Synthese 54 (2). 1983.
  •  111
    The value of truth
    Philosophical Issues 4 265-280. 1993.
  •  299
    Why is there anything except physics?
    Synthese 170 (2). 2009.
    In the course of defending his view of the relation between the special sciences and physics from Jaegwon Kim’s objections Jerry Fodor asks “So then, why is there anything except physics?” By which he seems to mean to ask if physics is fundamental and complete in its domain how can there be autonomous special science laws. Fodor wavers between epistemological and metaphysical understandings of the autonomy of the special sciences. In my paper I draw out the metaphysical construal of his view and…Read more
  •  442
  • E. Lepore
    with New Directions In Semantics
    In Ernest Lepore (ed.), New Directions in Semantics, Academic Press. pp. 83. 1987.
  •  21
    Richard L. Barber
    with Mind Matters and Ernest le Pore
    Journal of Philosophy 85 (1). 1988.
  •  140
    It is not so much a distinct and established academic discipline as it is a sort of boundary, a sort of frontier, across which theoretical physics and modern western philosophy have been interrogating and informing and unsettling one another, for something on the order of four hundred years now, about the character of matter, the nature of space and time, the question of determinism, meaning of chance, the possibility of knowledge, and much else besides.
  •  24
    An argument for strong supervenience
    In Elias E. Savellos & U. Yalcin (eds.), Supervenience: New Essays, Cambridge University Press. pp. 218--225. 1995.
  •  79
    Wanted Dead or Alive: Two Attempts to Solve Schrodinger's Paradox
    with David Albert
    PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1990 277-285. 1990.
    We discuss two recent attempts two solve Schrodinger's cat paradox. One is the modal interpretation developed by Kochen, Healey, Dieks, and van Fraassen. It allows for an observable which pertains to a system to possess a value even when the system is not in an eigenstate of that observable. The other is a recent theory of the collapse of the wave function due to Ghirardi, Rimini, and Weber. It posits a dynamics which has the effect of collapsing the state of macroscopic systems. We argue that t…Read more
  •  494
    Humean Supervenience
    Philosophical Topics 24 (1): 101-127. 1996.
  •  386
    David Lewis’s Humean Theory of Objective Chance
    Philosophy of Science 71 (5): 1115--25. 2004.
    The most important theories in fundamental physics, quantum mechanics and statistical mechanics, posit objective probabilities or chances. As important as chance is there is little agreement about what it is. The usual “interpretations of probability” give very different accounts of chance and there is disagreement concerning which, if any, is capable of accounting for its role in physics. David Lewis has contributed enormously to improving this situation. In his classic paper “A Subjectivist's …Read more
  •  39
    Understanding Scientific Reasoning (review)
    Teaching Philosophy 6 (2): 177-181. 1983.
  •  173
    Comments on Jaegwon Kim’s Mind and the Physical World
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 65 (3). 2002.
    NRP is a family of views differing by how they understand “reduction” and “physicalism.” Following Kim I understand the non-reduction as holding that some events and properties are distinct from any physical events and properties. A necessary condition for physicalism is that mental properties, events, and laws supervene on physical ones. Kim allows various understandings of “supervenience” but I think that physicalism requires at least the claim that any minimal physical duplicate of the actual…Read more