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49Realism, Mathematics and Modality (review)International Studies in Philosophy 24 (3): 139-141. 1992.
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139Predication versus membership in the distinction between logic as language and logic as calculusSynthese 77 (1): 37-72. 1988.
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122Nominalism and conceptualism as predicative second-order theories of predicationNotre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 21 (3): 481-500. 1980.
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Conceptual realism as a theory of logical formRevue Internationale de Philosophie 51 (200): 175-199. 1997.
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368On the logic of natural kindsPhilosophy of Science 43 (2): 202-222. 1976.A minimal second order modal logic of natural kinds is formulated. Concepts are distinguished from properties and relations in the conceptual-logistic background of the logic through a distinction between free and bound predicate variables. Not all concepts (as indicated by free predicate variables) need have a property or relation corresponding to them (as values of bound predicate variables). Issues pertaining to identity and existence as impredicative concepts are examined and an analysis of …Read more
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33Errata: On the Logic of Nominalized Predicates and Its Philosophical InterpretationsErkenntnis 14 (1): 103-104. 1979.
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33A Note On The Definition Of Identity In Quine's New FoundationsMathematical Logic Quarterly 22 (1): 195-197. 1976.
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193Infinity in ontology and mindAxiomathes 18 (1): 1-24. 2008.Two fundamental categories of any ontology are the category of objects and the category of universals. We discuss the question whether either of these categories can be infinite or not. In the category of objects, the subcategory of physical objects is examined within the context of different cosmological theories regarding the different kinds of fundamental objects in the universe. Abstract objects are discussed in terms of sets and the intensional objects of conceptual realism. The category of…Read more
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116Bull R. A.. An algebraic study of tense logics with linear time (review)Journal of Symbolic Logic 36 (1): 173. 1971.
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81James E. Tomberlin. Existence attributes: a second look. The review of metaphysics, vol. 24 no. 4, pp. 737–738Journal of Symbolic Logic 40 (2): 253-254. 1975.
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204Predication in Conceptual RealismAxiomathes 23 (2): 301-321. 2013.Conceptual realism begins with a conceptualist theory of the nexus of predication in our speech and mental acts, a theory that explains the unity of those acts in terms of their referential and predicable aspects. This theory also contains as an integral part an intensional realism based on predicate nominalization and a reflexive abstraction in which the intensional contents of our concepts are “object”-ified, and by which an analysis of predication with intensional verbs can be given. Through …Read more
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99A substitution free axiom set for second order logicNotre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 10 (1): 18-30. 1969.
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51Continuity and Change in the Development of Russell's PhilosophyJournal of the History of Philosophy 35 (1): 150-151. 1997.
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120Meinong reconstructed versus early Russell reconstructedJournal of Philosophical Logic 11 (2): 183-214. 1982.
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135A Logical Reconstruction of Medieval Terminist Logic in Conceptual RealismHistory of Philosophy & Logical Analysis 4 (1): 35-72. 2001.The framework of conceptual realism provides a logically ideal language within which to reconstruct the medieval terminist logic of the 14th century. The terminist notion of a concept, which shifted from Ockham's early view of a concept as an intentional object to his later view of a concept as a mental act, is reconstructed in this framework in terms of the idea of concepts as unsaturated cognitive structures. Intentional objects are not rejected but are reconstructed as the objectified intensi…Read more
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258Logic and OntologyAxiomathes 12 (1): 117-150. 2001.A brief review of the historicalrelation between logic and ontologyand of the opposition between the viewsof logic as language and logic as calculusis given. We argue that predication is morefundamental than membership and that differenttheories of predication are based on differenttheories of universals, the three most importantbeing nominalism, conceptualism, and realism.These theories can be formulated as formalontologies, each with its own logic, andcompared with one another in terms of thei…Read more
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Formal ontologyIn Hans Burkhardt & Barry Smith (eds.), Handbook of metaphysics and ontology, Philosophia Verlag. pp. 640--647. 1991.
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80Review of Uwe Meixner, Modelling Metaphysics: The Metaphysics of a Model (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2010 (5). 2010.
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Indiana University, BloomingtonRetired faculty
Areas of Specialization
| Metaphysics |
| Philosophy of Language |
| Logic and Philosophy of Logic |
| Philosophy of Biology |
| Philosophy of Mathematics |