•  136
    Continuants and Occurrents
    with Joseph Melia
    Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 74 59-92. 2000.
    Commonsense ontology contains both continuants and occurrents, but are continuants necessary? I argue that they are neither occurrents nor easily replaceable by them. The worst problem for continuants is the question in virtue of what a given continuant exists at a given time. For such truthmakers we must have recourse to occurrents, those vital to the continuant at that time. Continuants are, like abstract objects, invariants under equivalences over occurrents. But they are not abstract, and th…Read more
  •  47
    Truth-maker optimalism
    Logique Et Analyse 43 (169-170): 17-41. 2000.
  •  114
    A Semantics for Ontology
    Dialectica 39 (3): 193-215. 1985.
    SummaryLeśniewski presented his logical systems in a way which conformed to his nominalism, so the question arises whether Leśniewski's logic can be given a natural formal semantics which, unlike current versions, avoids commitment to abstract entities. Building on hints in Wittgenstein's Tractatus, I develop the idea of a way of meaning which is the basis for what I call combinatorial semantics. I then consider whether this commits us to abstract objects or an intensional metalogic
  •  41
  •  1
    Supernumeration: Vagueness and Numbers
    In Richard Dietz & Sebastiano Moruzzi (eds.), Cuts and clouds: vagueness, its nature, and its logic, Oxford University Press. 2010.
  •  56
    Armstrong and Tropes
    In Francesco Federico Calemi (ed.), Metaphysics and Scientific Realism: Essays in Honour of David Malet Armstrong, De Gruyter. pp. 71-84. 2016.
  • Logic in the Brentano School
    In Liliana Albertazzi, Massimo Libardi & Roberto Poli (eds.), The School of Franz Brentano, Kluwer Academic Publishers. 1995.
  •  245
    How to Exist at a Time When You Have No Temporal Parts
    The Monist 83 (3): 419-436. 2000.
    Occurrents are entities that exist in time and, with few or no exceptions, extend over time as well, that is, they have parts corresponding to the different times at which they exist. This makes it very easy to say what makes it true that they exist at the times at which they do. Singular existential propositions, being contingent, positive and arguably atomic, stand in need of truth-makers, entities in virtue of whose existence they are true. The obvious candidate for what makes it true that To…Read more
  •  6
    Why the negations of false atomic sentences are true
    Essays on Armstrong. Acta Philosophica Fennica 84. 2008.
  •  206
    Metaphysical systematics: A lesson from Whitehead (review)
    Erkenntnis 48 (2): 377-393. 1998.
    Despite its lack of influence in analytical philosophy, and independently of its content as a process philosophy, Whitehead's system in Process and Reality affords a valuable lesson on how to pursue revisionary systematic metaphysics. This paper argues the case generally for metaphysical revision and system, describes the structure of Whitehead's categorial scheme, endorses his idea of an ultimate which is not an entity, and outlines an alternative, “digital” ultimate or basis composed of severa…Read more
  •  119
    The Reach of Correspondence
    Dialogue 44 (3): 551-562. 2005.
  •  111
    Bolzano's Monadology
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 23 (6): 1074-1084. 2015.
    Bernard Bolzano, known in his lifetime as ‘the Bohemian Leibniz’, is best known as a logician and mathematician, but he also developed a monadology in which the monads, which he called ‘atoms’, have spatial location and physical properties. This essay summarizes and assesses his monadology
  •  169
    The Logic of Location
    Synthese 150 (3): 443-458. 2006.
    I consider the idea of a propositional logic of location based on the following semantic framework, derived from ideas of Prior. We have a collection L of locations and a collection S of statements such that a statement may be evaluated for truth at each location. Typically one and the same statement may be true at one location and false at another. Given this semantic framework we may proceed in two ways: introducing names for locations, predicates for the relations among them and an “at” prepo…Read more
  •  80
    Essay review
    History and Philosophy of Logic 15 (2): 227-235. 1994.
    stanislaw lesniewski, Collected Works, Edited by Stanislaw J. Surma, Jan T. Srzednicki and D. I. Barnett, with an annotated bibliography by V. Frederick Rickey. Warsaw:PWN?Polish Scientific Publishers; and Dordrecht, Boston, London: Kluwer. 2 vols., xvi + 794 pp. $274/£163/Dfl. 480
  •  75
    Leśniewski and Generalized Quantifiers
    European Journal of Philosophy 2 (1): 65-84. 1994.