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Ted Parent

Nazarbayev University
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  • Nazarbayev University
    Department of Humanities
    Associate Professor
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2009
APA Eastern Division
Homepage
Astana, Kazakhstan
Areas of Specialization
Metaphysics and Epistemology
Areas of Interest
Epistemology
Metaphysics
Philosophy of Mind
Philosophy of Language
Logic and Philosophy of Logic
Metaphilosophy
20th Century Philosophy
General Philosophy of Science
Philosophy of Religion
4 more
PhilPapers Editorships
Knowledge-Wh
Ontology
Existence
Externalism and Self-Knowledge
Externalism and Slow Switching
Externalism and Armchair Knowledge
Externalism and Self-Knowledge, Misc
2 more
  • All publications (51)
  •  69
    A Quinean Rejoinder to Kripke on Modality
    In Gary Kemp & Ali Hossein Khani (eds.), The Quinean Mind, Routledge. forthcoming.
    It is argued that Quine's oft-made point about modal opacity has a hitherto unappreciated force. It ultimately suggests that Kripke's recursive semantics is not well-defined on de re modal statements, assuming that (e.g.) numbers are not individuated intensionally . (Marcus's system QS4 avoids the issue due to her substitutional quantifiers, although she invokes intensional objects for other reasons). One solution is to restrict substitution in both the object language and the metalanguage, but …Read more
    It is argued that Quine's oft-made point about modal opacity has a hitherto unappreciated force. It ultimately suggests that Kripke's recursive semantics is not well-defined on de re modal statements, assuming that (e.g.) numbers are not individuated intensionally . (Marcus's system QS4 avoids the issue due to her substitutional quantifiers, although she invokes intensional objects for other reasons). One solution is to restrict substitution in both the object language and the metalanguage, but either the problem repeats in the meta-metalanguage (and so on), or Kripke must relinquish that modal truths represent metaphysical realities, e.g., essences. However, a Kripkean might retort that QML is indispensable to a scientific description of natural language, meaning that Quine is also threatened with an intensional ontology. A programmatic sketch is offered in reply. The ontology of intensional linguistics is accepted as faithful to the ontology of ordinary language, but a Quinean can coherently add that the ontology is mistaken.
    Modal and Intensional LogicModal SkepticismQuantification and OntologyOntological CommitmentPhilosop…Read more
    Modal and Intensional LogicModal SkepticismQuantification and OntologyOntological CommitmentPhilosophy of LinguisticsSubstitutional QuantificationMetaphysical NecessityIntensionality and OpacityPossible World SemanticsRigid DesignationEssentialism and Quantified Modal Logic
  •  52
    Ontology After Folk Psychology; or, Why Eliminativists Should Be Mental Fictionalists
    Analytic Philosophy 67 (1): 1-11. 2026.
    Mental fictionalism holds that folk psychology should be regarded as a kind of fiction. The present version gives a Lewisian prefix semantics for mentalistic discourse, where roughly, a mentalistic sentence “p” is true iff “p” is deducible from the folk psychological fiction. An eliminativist version of the view can seem self-refuting, but this charge is neutralized. Yet a different kind of “self-effacing” emerges: Mental fictionalism appears to be a mere “parasite” on a future science of cognit…Read more
    Mental fictionalism holds that folk psychology should be regarded as a kind of fiction. The present version gives a Lewisian prefix semantics for mentalistic discourse, where roughly, a mentalistic sentence “p” is true iff “p” is deducible from the folk psychological fiction. An eliminativist version of the view can seem self-refuting, but this charge is neutralized. Yet a different kind of “self-effacing” emerges: Mental fictionalism appears to be a mere “parasite” on a future science of cognition without contributing anything substantial. The paper then rebuts the objection, illustrating that prefix semantics resolves a lingering problem for eliminativism from Boghossian. The problem is that eliminativists seem unable to adopt realism about neuroscience, for such realism implies that neuroscientific statements represent reality accurately. However, a deflationary version of prefix semantics allows the eliminativist to draw an ontologically relevant distinction (roughly) between truths that have a storytelling prefix and those that do not. (Deflationism means there is no implication that the unprefixed sentences robustly represent reality). The overarching lesson is that eliminativists need to approach ontology carefully so as to avoid self-refutation; however, prefix-semantical mental fictionalism provides the resources for them to do so.
  •  5
    Externalism and Self-Knowledge
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2013.
  •  110
    Ontology and Acceptance
    In László Kocsis & János Tőzsér (eds.), Equilibrism in Metaphilosophy, Routledge. 2026.
    Beebee’s (2018) equilibrism argues that methological problems and pervasive disagreement in philosophy suggests that we should not believe any philosophical claims, but at most accept them as working hypotheses. In this, Beebee takes van Fraasseen (1980) as inspiration, whose scientific instrumentalism proposes mere acceptance rather than belief in microphysical theories. In this paper, I suggest that mere acceptance for philosophical claims faces problems that are not incurred by scientific ins…Read more
    Beebee’s (2018) equilibrism argues that methological problems and pervasive disagreement in philosophy suggests that we should not believe any philosophical claims, but at most accept them as working hypotheses. In this, Beebee takes van Fraasseen (1980) as inspiration, whose scientific instrumentalism proposes mere acceptance rather than belief in microphysical theories. In this paper, I suggest that mere acceptance for philosophical claims faces problems that are not incurred by scientific instrumentalism. One issue is that unlike van Fraassen's pragmatic (and somewhat skeptical) stance toward microphysics, Beebee wants mere acceptance of a proposition to still indicate one's sincere "view." I first consider several accounts of how to identify this non-believing attitude, e.g., by a low-ish credence to p, by an utterance of "p" under a fictionalist construal, and by an utterance of "p" under a deflationary construal. The first two still end up invoking philosophical beliefs, whereas the latter ends up radicalizing Beebee's position in an unfortunate way. I conclude that barring a radical kind of deflationism, philosophical belief seems pretty much unavoidable.
    Formal EpistemologyMetaphilosophical SkepticismConstructive EmpiricismPhilosophical Language
  •  384
    A Liar Axiom from Direct Self-Reference
    Start with an extension of Q (Robinson arithmetic) that internalizes an axiom predicate, and has an axiom that denies axiom-status to a formula using a constant $\alpha$. Then, whether the system is consistent depends on which number is assigned to $\alpha$. Contradiction is provable if $\alpha$ is ``directly'' self-referential as per recent work by Kripke. The contradiction is structurally akin to the liar paradox but arises without the usual semantic or modal vocabulary. Several solutions are …Read more
    Start with an extension of Q (Robinson arithmetic) that internalizes an axiom predicate, and has an axiom that denies axiom-status to a formula using a constant $\alpha$. Then, whether the system is consistent depends on which number is assigned to $\alpha$. Contradiction is provable if $\alpha$ is ``directly'' self-referential as per recent work by Kripke. The contradiction is structurally akin to the liar paradox but arises without the usual semantic or modal vocabulary. Several solutions are noted. Yet it remains that axiomhood exhibits liar-like fragility under naive internalization.
    Logical ConstantsLogical Consequence and EntailmentClassical LogicLogical Semantics and Logical Trut…Read more
    Logical ConstantsLogical Consequence and EntailmentClassical LogicLogical Semantics and Logical TruthLiar ParadoxMathematical Logic
  •  130
    Dennett as (Weak) Mental Fictionalist
    Daniel Dennett's intentional systems theory occupies a middle ground between hyper-realism and eliminativism about belief. Nonetheless, Dennett has resisted being pinned down, describing belief as both real and fictional, abstract yet perhaps neurally real. This paper argues that Dennett’s view is best understood as a version of weak mental fictionalism, where belief attributions are true according to a predictive interpretive framework, without a commitment to concrete representational states. …Read more
    Daniel Dennett's intentional systems theory occupies a middle ground between hyper-realism and eliminativism about belief. Nonetheless, Dennett has resisted being pinned down, describing belief as both real and fictional, abstract yet perhaps neurally real. This paper argues that Dennett’s view is best understood as a version of weak mental fictionalism, where belief attributions are true according to a predictive interpretive framework, without a commitment to concrete representational states. Drawing on Lewisian prefix-semantics and a deflationary theory of meaning, I show how this view preserves Dennett’s commitments to objective patterns and interpretability while avoiding the regress problems posed by Kriegel and Boghossian. The result is a fictionalism that is semantically regimented, ontologically modest, and consonant with Dennett’s broader philosophical temperament. I close by suggesting that this reconstructed view finds its natural home within a quietist metaphilosophical stance.
    The Nature of BeliefInterpretivist Accounts of Meaning and ContentExplanatory Role of ContentInferen…Read more
    The Nature of BeliefInterpretivist Accounts of Meaning and ContentExplanatory Role of ContentInferentialist Accounts of Meaning and ContentAttitude AscriptionsRepresentation in Cognitive ScienceThe Intentional Stance
  • Mental Fictionalism: Elements in Philosophy of Mind
    with Adam Toon and Tamas Demeter
    [Under contract with CUP, in preparation] What is a mind? Is it possible for a computer or other machine to have a mind? And how would we know? Mental fictionalism offers a new approach to these timely questions. Its central idea is that mental states (thoughts, beliefs, desires) are useful fictions. When we talk about mental states, we should be seen as merely speaking “as if” humans (and perhaps other creatures or even artifacts) had such states, in order to make sense of their behavior. This …Read more
    [Under contract with CUP, in preparation] What is a mind? Is it possible for a computer or other machine to have a mind? And how would we know? Mental fictionalism offers a new approach to these timely questions. Its central idea is that mental states (thoughts, beliefs, desires) are useful fictions. When we talk about mental states, we should be seen as merely speaking “as if” humans (and perhaps other creatures or even artifacts) had such states, in order to make sense of their behavior. This book is unique in presenting and defending three versions of mental fictionalism in a single volume (prefix-semantical mental fictionalism, pretense mental fictionalism, and affective storyism). The authors are three of the world’s most prominent proponents (respectively) of each variety: T. Parent (Nazarbayev University), Adam Toon (University of Exeter), and Tamás Demeter (Corvinus University of Budapest). The book essentially pits these different varieties of mental fictionalism against each other, allowing the reader to size them up. In the process, fresh perspectives are offered on foundational matters in the philosophy of mind, such as the nature of mental states and folk psychology, as well as hot topics such as embodied cognition, animal cognition, consciousness, and AI. UPDATE: The chapter on prefix-semantical mental fictionalism is available upon request; write to nontology "at" gmail.
    Ontological FictionalismThe Nature of Folk PsychologyExplanatory Role of ContentEliminativism about …Read more
    Ontological FictionalismThe Nature of Folk PsychologyExplanatory Role of ContentEliminativism about Propositional AttitudesEpistemology of MindInterpretivist Accounts of Meaning and ContentPsychological ExplanationSkepticism about RepresentationsScientific FictionalismEliminativism about Qualia
  •  149
    Neo-Sellarsian Images of Philosophy and Science
    In László Kocsis & Krisztián Pete (eds.), Wilfrid Sellars’s Metaphilosophy: Two Images and the Philosophy in Between, Bloomsbury. 2026.
    Sellars (1962) contains some of the most important metaphilosophical reflections from the analytic tradition. He insightfully describes the relationship between philosophy and science, by identifying the philosophical task of integrating the manifest image into the scientific image. But while this description is sound, it is importantly incomplete. Here, I first suggest that a more complete picture shows philosophy in “superposition” in relation to science; philosophy occuplies multiple position…Read more
    Sellars (1962) contains some of the most important metaphilosophical reflections from the analytic tradition. He insightfully describes the relationship between philosophy and science, by identifying the philosophical task of integrating the manifest image into the scientific image. But while this description is sound, it is importantly incomplete. Here, I first suggest that a more complete picture shows philosophy in “superposition” in relation to science; philosophy occuplies multiple positions in relation to science, owing to the variegated tasks that philosophers pursue. In the final section, we shall see that our catalogue of philosophical tasks provides means for confronting that obstinate question “How is metaphysics possible?”
    The Nature of PhilosophyThe Role of PhilosophyObservation in ScienceEpistemology of PhilosophyPhilos…Read more
    The Nature of PhilosophyThe Role of PhilosophyObservation in ScienceEpistemology of PhilosophyPhilosophical MethodsMethodology in Metaphysics
  •  112
    Universal Primitive Recursion
    We first offer a minimal version of PRA where the subscript on any function symbol f_i allows us to recover the axiom defining the function symbol. An algorithm is then constructed where the relevant subscript guides the generation of a "canonical proof" of f_i(i,n) = m. (Halting occurs when a line is reached with zero occurrences of 'f' to the right of '='.) The resulting algorithm is then shown to satisfy all standard criteria for being p.r. This suggests that the standard diagonal objection d…Read more
    We first offer a minimal version of PRA where the subscript on any function symbol f_i allows us to recover the axiom defining the function symbol. An algorithm is then constructed where the relevant subscript guides the generation of a "canonical proof" of f_i(i,n) = m. (Halting occurs when a line is reached with zero occurrences of 'f' to the right of '='.) The resulting algorithm is then shown to satisfy all standard criteria for being p.r. This suggests that the standard diagonal objection does not apply straightforwardly in this setting, despite surface-level compliance with its assumptions. This points to a need for greater clarity about these assumptions.
    Mathematical LogicLogical Semantics and Logical TruthParadoxes, MiscellaneousLogic and Philosophy of…Read more
    Mathematical LogicLogical Semantics and Logical TruthParadoxes, MiscellaneousLogic and Philosophy of Logic, Misc
  •  110
    Knowledge of One's Own Credences
    In Adam Andreotta & Benjamin Winokur (eds.), New perspectives on transparency and self-knowledge, Routledge. 2025.
    This paper begins with a problem stemming from Hume regarding credences about credences. Suppose one has a credence of .95 in p, and suppose one assesses the credence to be such. But suppose one’s second-order credence in this assessment is less than 1. Then, by a standard conditionalization rule, one’s credence in p becomes less than .95. Moreover, such “erosion” can iterate by considering one’s, third-, fourth-, fifth-order credences, etc. (In light of this, some have rejected higher-order cre…Read more
    This paper begins with a problem stemming from Hume regarding credences about credences. Suppose one has a credence of .95 in p, and suppose one assesses the credence to be such. But suppose one’s second-order credence in this assessment is less than 1. Then, by a standard conditionalization rule, one’s credence in p becomes less than .95. Moreover, such “erosion” can iterate by considering one’s, third-, fourth-, fifth-order credences, etc. (In light of this, some have rejected higher-order credences; however, it is argued that Lewis’ “Principal Principle” forbids this.) The paper then offers a partial solution by describing circumstances under which a person has reason to assign credence 1 to a first-order credence. The solution takes the form of a “transparency” view of self-knowledge from Parent (2017, chapter 8). Briefly, it is argued that when one “reflex-like” utters a sentence “The probability of p is n”, then as a matter of psychological law, the utterance is an expression of one’s own judgment. The Principal Principle then necessitates that one’s credence in p is n, assuming one is being rational. Thus, upon perceiving such an utterance, one can thereby have a reason to assign a second-order credence of 1.
    Expression-Based Accounts of Self-KnowledgeInfallibility and Incorrigibility In Self-KnowledgeCondit…Read more
    Expression-Based Accounts of Self-KnowledgeInfallibility and Incorrigibility In Self-KnowledgeConditionalizationObservation-Based Accounts of Self-KnowledgeBayesian ReasoningRationality-Based Accounts of Self-Knowledge
  •  177
    A Map of Selves: Beyond Philosophy of Mind
    Philosophical Quarterly 73 (3): 887-889. 2023.
    In many respects, N.M.L. Nathan's latest book feels timeless. Its brevity and pithiness especially remind one of Descartes’ Meditations; it even has similar ove.
    Introspection and IntrospectionismThe Unity of ConsciousnessThe SelfMetaphilosophy, MiscellaneousMem…Read more
    Introspection and IntrospectionismThe Unity of ConsciousnessThe SelfMetaphilosophy, MiscellaneousMemoryDualism
  •  247
    Against God of the Truth-Value Gaps
    Analysis 84 (3): 516-522. 2024.
    Can God create an unliftable stone? Beall & Cotnoir propose that ‘God can create an unliftable stone’ is a truth-value gap (neither true nor false). However, this yields a revenge paradox on whether God can eschew gaps. Can God avoid gappy ascriptions of power? Either way, God’s power seems to have limits. In response, it may be said that ascribing God the power to avoid gaps is itself gappy—it concerns a power that God neither has nor lacks. Yet this ends up being inconsistent, for it implies t…Read more
    Can God create an unliftable stone? Beall & Cotnoir propose that ‘God can create an unliftable stone’ is a truth-value gap (neither true nor false). However, this yields a revenge paradox on whether God can eschew gaps. Can God avoid gappy ascriptions of power? Either way, God’s power seems to have limits. In response, it may be said that ascribing God the power to avoid gaps is itself gappy—it concerns a power that God neither has nor lacks. Yet this ends up being inconsistent, for it implies that God definitely lacks that power. Following Aquinas, perhaps Beall & Cotnoir could accept this lack and still uphold omnipotence, suggesting that the power to avoid gaps is impossible for God. Yet the Aquinian stratagem is enough to block the original paradox, which saps the motivation to proffer truth-value gaps in addition. I conclude that the gappy solution is either inadequate or insufficiently motivated.
    Nonclassical LogicsDivine OmnipotenceTruth-Value Gaps
  •  166
    Modest versus ultra-modest dialetheism
    Asian Journal of Philosophy 2 (2): 1-17. 2023.
    Jc Beall is known for defending modest dialetheism; this is the view that there are dialetheia, but only in the form of “spandrels” arising from otherwise reasonable semantic terminology (e.g., the Liar paradox). Beall also regards his view as modest in partaking of a deflationary view of truth, a view where ‘true’ is a device of disquotational inference which expresses no “substantive property.” Beall supports deflationism by an appeal to Ockham’s razor; however, the premise that ‘true’ is fund…Read more
    Jc Beall is known for defending modest dialetheism; this is the view that there are dialetheia, but only in the form of “spandrels” arising from otherwise reasonable semantic terminology (e.g., the Liar paradox). Beall also regards his view as modest in partaking of a deflationary view of truth, a view where ‘true’ is a device of disquotational inference which expresses no “substantive property.” Beall supports deflationism by an appeal to Ockham’s razor; however, the premise that ‘true’ is fundamentally disquotational is found dubious. Nonetheless, we can craft an ultra-modest dialetheism which assumes only that at least one utterance of ‘This sentence is not true’ uses ‘true’ as a disquotational device, and maintains neturality on whether it expresses a substantive property. The limited scope of the ultra-modest view will be disappointing to formal semanticists hoping to capture the behavior of ‘true’ throughout the language. But its modest basis gives dialetheism the best hope for wider acceptance in the discipline.
    DialetheismTruth-Value GlutsLogical Semantics and Logical TruthLiar ParadoxDeflationism about Truth,…Read more
    DialetheismTruth-Value GlutsLogical Semantics and Logical TruthLiar ParadoxDeflationism about Truth, MiscDisquotationalism about Truth
  •  997
    Eliminativism and Reading One's Own Mind
    Some contemporary philosophers suggest that we know just by introspection that folk psychological states exist. However, such an "armchair refutation" of eliminativism seems too easy. I first attack two strategems, inspired by Descartes, on how such a refutation might proceed. However, I concede that the Cartesian intuition that we have direct knowledge of representational states is very powerful. The rest of this paper then offers an error theory of how that intuition might really be mistaken. …Read more
    Some contemporary philosophers suggest that we know just by introspection that folk psychological states exist. However, such an "armchair refutation" of eliminativism seems too easy. I first attack two strategems, inspired by Descartes, on how such a refutation might proceed. However, I concede that the Cartesian intuition that we have direct knowledge of representational states is very powerful. The rest of this paper then offers an error theory of how that intuition might really be mistaken. The idea is that introspection does not detect any folk psychological states, but rather detects neural states that dispose us to certain sorts of linguistic behavior. Briefly, rather than detecting a mental appearance of the state-of-affairs that I am sitting near the fire, introspection detects a state disposing me to assert "It appears to me that I am sitting by the fire." The nature of this linguistic-dispositional state is then given a connectionist underpinning, where inputs from introspection lead to such assertive behavior. The Cartesian certainty we feel in self-ascribing such appearances is also explained. Even though I do not endorse such an error theory outright, I suggest that its tenability is enough to undercut introspection arguments against eliminativism.
    Language Production and Comprehension, MiscConnectionism and EliminativismIntrospection and Introspe…Read more
    Language Production and Comprehension, MiscConnectionism and EliminativismIntrospection and IntrospectionismFirst-Person Authority and Privileged AccessEliminative MaterialismInfallibility and Incorrigibility In Self-KnowledgeConceptual and Nonconceptual Content
  •  140
    What is Mental Fictionalism?
    with Tamas Demeter and Adam Toon
    In Tamás Demeter, T. Parent & Adam Toon (eds.), Mental Fictionalism: Philosophical Explorations, Routledge. pp. 1-24. 2022.
    This chapter introduces several versions of mental fictionalism, along with the main lines of objection and reply. It begins by considering the debate between eliminative materialism (“eliminativism”) versus realism about mental states as conceived in “folk psychology” (i.e., beliefs, desires, intentions, etc.). Mental fictionalism offers a way to transcend the debate by allowing talk of mental states without a commitment to realism. The idea is to treat folk psychology as a “story” and three di…Read more
    This chapter introduces several versions of mental fictionalism, along with the main lines of objection and reply. It begins by considering the debate between eliminative materialism (“eliminativism”) versus realism about mental states as conceived in “folk psychology” (i.e., beliefs, desires, intentions, etc.). Mental fictionalism offers a way to transcend the debate by allowing talk of mental states without a commitment to realism. The idea is to treat folk psychology as a “story” and three different elaborations of this are reviewed. First, prefix semantics paraphrases a sentence like ‘Biden believes that Trump lost’ as ‘According to folk psychology, Biden believes that Trump lost’, whereby ontological commitment to belief is avoided. Similarly, pretense theory suggests that we do not assert ‘Biden believes that Trump lost’, but only pretend to assert it. Third, affective theory proposes that such discourse is used in a metaphorical way to understand a person’s affective and dispositional states vis-a-vis the community. The main objections concern whether folk psychology has the features of storytelling, and whether mental fictionalism ends up being self-refuting. The chapter also recaps a less discussed fictionalist view about “qualia” or phenomenal states, and closes by summarizing the papers contained in the volume.
    Skepticism about RepresentationsEliminativism about Propositional AttitudesExplanatory Role of Conte…Read more
    Skepticism about RepresentationsEliminativism about Propositional AttitudesExplanatory Role of ContentPsychological ExplanationTheory of Mind and Folk PsychologyRepresentation in Cognitive ScienceEliminative MaterialismInterpretivist Accounts of Meaning and ContentThe Intentional Stance
  •  277
    Ontology after Folk Psychology; or, Why Eliminativists should be Mental Fictionalists
    Analytic Philosophy. 2026.
    Mental fictionalism holds that folk psychology should be regarded as a kind of fiction. The present version gives a Lewisian prefix semantics for mentalistic discourse, where roughly, a mentalistic sentence “p” is true iff “p” is deducible from the folk psychological fiction. An eliminativist version of the view can seem self-refuting, but this charge is neutralized. Yet a different kind of “self-effacing” emerges: Mental fictionalism appears to be a mere “parasite” on a future science of cognit…Read more
    Mental fictionalism holds that folk psychology should be regarded as a kind of fiction. The present version gives a Lewisian prefix semantics for mentalistic discourse, where roughly, a mentalistic sentence “p” is true iff “p” is deducible from the folk psychological fiction. An eliminativist version of the view can seem self-refuting, but this charge is neutralized. Yet a different kind of “self-effacing” emerges: Mental fictionalism appears to be a mere “parasite” on a future science of cognition, without contributing anything substantial. The paper then rebuts the objection, illustrating that prefix semantics resolves a lingering problem for eliminativism from Boghossian. The problem is that eliminativists seem unable to adopt realism about neuroscience, for such realism implies that neuroscientific statements *represent* reality accurately. However, a deflationary version of prefix semantics allows the eliminativist to draw an ontologically relevant distinction (roughly) between truths that have a story-telling prefix and those that do not. (Deflationism means there is no implication that the unprefixed sentences robustly represent reality.) The overarching lesson is that eliminativists need to approach to ontology carefully so to avoid self-refutation; however, prefix semantical mental fictionalism provides the resources for them to do so.
    Deflationism about Truth, MiscEliminativism about Propositional AttitudesRepresentation in Cognitive…Read more
    Deflationism about Truth, MiscEliminativism about Propositional AttitudesRepresentation in Cognitive ScienceEliminative MaterialismOntological CommitmentOntological FictionalismThe Nature of Folk PsychologyDisquotationalism about Truth
  •  415
    Philosophy is a Great Success, and We are Fooled into Thinking Otherwise
    In Green Mitchell & Michel Jan G. (eds.), William Lycan on Mind, Meaning, and Method, Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 273-298. 2024.
    [For a planned Festschrift on William Lycan, edited by Mitch Green and Jan Michel.] Lycan (2022) sums up his (2019) _On Evidence in Philosophy_ as a “dolorous” book. This is primarily because the book claims that the field is infected with non-rational socio-psychological forces (fashion, bias, etc.) and that there is a persistent lack of consensus on philosophical questions. In this paper, I primarily rebut Lycan's second reason for dolorousness. For one, if we attend carefully to his text, his…Read more
    [For a planned Festschrift on William Lycan, edited by Mitch Green and Jan Michel.] Lycan (2022) sums up his (2019) _On Evidence in Philosophy_ as a “dolorous” book. This is primarily because the book claims that the field is infected with non-rational socio-psychological forces (fashion, bias, etc.) and that there is a persistent lack of consensus on philosophical questions. In this paper, I primarily rebut Lycan's second reason for dolorousness. For one, if we attend carefully to his text, his metaphilosophical despair seems to die a death of 1000 qualifications. For another, several of the most important qualifications to such pessimism have been omitted. In attending to these, we shall see that philosophy has much to be proud of. I also offer an explanation for why many optimistic signs for philosophical progress tend to escape our notice.
    Epistemology of Philosophy, MiscPhilosophical ProgressThe Nature of Analytic PhilosophyThe Role of P…Read more
    Epistemology of Philosophy, MiscPhilosophical ProgressThe Nature of Analytic PhilosophyThe Role of PhilosophyThe Value of PhilosophyMetaphilosophical SkepticismOntological DisagreementMetaphysical NaturalismDisagreement in Philosophy
  •  225
    Mental Fictionalism: Philosophical Explorations (edited book)
    with Tamás Demeter and Adam Toon
    Routledge. 2022.
    What are mental states? When we talk about people’s beliefs or desires, are we talking about what is happening inside their heads? If so, might cognitive science show that we are wrong? Might it turn out that mental states do not exist? Mental fictionalism offers a new approach to these longstanding questions about the mind. Its core idea is that mental states are useful fictions. When we talk about mental states, we are not formulating hypotheses about people’s inner machinery. Instead, we simp…Read more
    What are mental states? When we talk about people’s beliefs or desires, are we talking about what is happening inside their heads? If so, might cognitive science show that we are wrong? Might it turn out that mental states do not exist? Mental fictionalism offers a new approach to these longstanding questions about the mind. Its core idea is that mental states are useful fictions. When we talk about mental states, we are not formulating hypotheses about people’s inner machinery. Instead, we simply talk "as if" people had certain inner states, such as beliefs or desires, in order to make sense of their behaviour. This is the first book dedicated to exploring mental fictionalism. Featuring contributions from established authors as well as up-and-coming scholars in this burgeoning field, the book reveals the exciting potential of a fictionalist approach to the mind, as well as the challenges it faces. In doing so, it offers a fresh perspective on foundational debates in the philosophy of mind, such as the nature of mental states and folk psychology, as well as hot topics in the field, such as embodied cognition and mental representation. Mental Fictionalism: Philosophical Explorations essential reading for advanced undergraduates, postgraduates and professionals alike.
    Skepticism about RepresentationsThe Intentional StanceNaturalism and IntentionalityEliminativism abo…Read more
    Skepticism about RepresentationsThe Intentional StanceNaturalism and IntentionalityEliminativism about Propositional AttitudesEliminative MaterialismExplanatory Role of ContentReduction in Cognitive SciencePhysicalism about the Mind, MiscPsychological Explanation
  •  284
    A Critical Introduction to the Metaphysics of Modality, by Andrea Borghini: London: Bloomsbury Academic Press, 2016, pp. vii + 224, £22.99
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 96 (1): 204-204. 2018.
    Modal ErsatizismModal RealismModal SkepticismModal FictionalismModal Noncognitivism
  •  91
    Halverson’s non-equivalent concepts of equivalence: Hans Halvorson: The logic in philosophy of science. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019, xiii +296 pp, £26.99 PB
    Metascience 30 (1): 99-102. 2021.
    Model TheoryLogical Semantics and Logical TruthEmpirically Equivalent Theories
  •  247
    I Think; Therefore, I am a Fiction
    In Tamás Demeter, T. Parent & Adam Toon (eds.), Mental Fictionalism: Philosophical Explorations, Routledge. 2022.
    The Cartesian thinking self may seem indisputably real. But if it is real, then so thinking, which would undercut mental fictionalism. Thus, in defense of mental fictionalism, this paper argues for fictionalism about the thinking self. In short form, the argument is: (1) If I exist outside of fiction, then I am identical to (some part of/) this biomass [= my body]. (2) If I die at t, I cease to exist at t. (3) If I die at t, no part of this biomass ceases to exist at t. (4) Therefore, no part of…Read more
    The Cartesian thinking self may seem indisputably real. But if it is real, then so thinking, which would undercut mental fictionalism. Thus, in defense of mental fictionalism, this paper argues for fictionalism about the thinking self. In short form, the argument is: (1) If I exist outside of fiction, then I am identical to (some part of/) this biomass [= my body]. (2) If I die at t, I cease to exist at t. (3) If I die at t, no part of this biomass ceases to exist at t. (4) Therefore, no part of this biomass is identical to me. [From (2), (3)] (5) Therefore, I do not exist outside of fiction. [From (4), (1)] One reply to the argument is that the self is an aggregate of electricity in the brain which disperses upon death. The rejoinder is that this, at best, describes the thoughts realized in the brain, and not the subject who thinks the thoughts. A second objection stresses the undeniable sense that the thinking self has a location. In reply, the extended thought-experiment from Dennett’s “Where Am I?” is used to show that the sense of self-location may well be illusory.
    Ambiguity and PolysemyPuzzle Cases in Personal IdentityContext and Context-Dependence, MiscOntologic…Read more
    Ambiguity and PolysemyPuzzle Cases in Personal IdentityContext and Context-Dependence, MiscOntological CommitmentQuantification and OntologyThe SelfMetaphysics of Mind, Misc
  •  243
    Ontological Commitment and Quantifiers
    In Ricki Bliss & James Miller (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Metametaphysics, Routledge. 2020.
    This is a slightly opinionated review of three main factions in metaontology: Quineans, Carnapians, and Meinongians. Emphasis is given to the last camp, as the metaontological aspect of Meinongianism has been underappreciated. The final section then offers some general remarks about the legitimacy of ontology, touching on ideas I have developed in other publications.
    Methodology in MetaphysicsOntological CommitmentQuantification and Ontology
  •  224
    Colivan Commitment, vis-à-vis Moore’s Paradox
    Philosophia 47 (2): 323-333. 2019.
    This is a contribution to a symposium on Annalisa Coliva's book _The Varieties of Self-Knowledge_. I present her notion of a "commitment" and how it is used in her treatment of Moore paradoxical assertions and thoughts (e.g., "I believe that it is raining, but it is not;" "It is raining but I do not believe that it is"). The final section notes the points of convergence between her constitutivism about self-knowledge of commitments, and the constitutivism from my book _Self-Reflection for the Op…Read more
    This is a contribution to a symposium on Annalisa Coliva's book _The Varieties of Self-Knowledge_. I present her notion of a "commitment" and how it is used in her treatment of Moore paradoxical assertions and thoughts (e.g., "I believe that it is raining, but it is not;" "It is raining but I do not believe that it is"). The final section notes the points of convergence between her constitutivism about self-knowledge of commitments, and the constitutivism from my book _Self-Reflection for the Opaque Mind_.
    Moore's ParadoxTacit and Dispositional BeliefFirst-Person Authority and Privileged AccessReasons and…Read more
    Moore's ParadoxTacit and Dispositional BeliefFirst-Person Authority and Privileged AccessReasons and RationalityInfallibility and Incorrigibility In Self-Knowledge
  •  286
    A Critique of Metaphysical Thinking
    Draft of March 2022. This is a draft of the front matter and ch. 1, for a new book manuscript on metametaphysics.
    Ontological FictionalismThe Model-Theoretic ArgumentExistenceNormativity and NaturalismPragmatism, M…Read more
    Ontological FictionalismThe Model-Theoretic ArgumentExistenceNormativity and NaturalismPragmatism, Misc
  •  206
    Empty Representations: Reference and Non-existence By Manuel García-Carpintero and Genoveva Martí
    Analysis 78 (1): 172-173. 2018.
    Empty NamesAspects of Intentionality, MiscNonexistent ObjectsReference FailureNonreferring Expressio…Read more
    Empty NamesAspects of Intentionality, MiscNonexistent ObjectsReference FailureNonreferring Expressions
  •  244
    Modal Realism and the Meaning of 'Exist'
    Here I first raise an argument purporting to show that Lewis’ Modal Realism ends up being entirely trivial. But although I reject this line, the argument reveals how difficult it is to interpret Lewis’ thesis that possibilia “exist.” Five natural interpretations are considered, yet upon reflection, none appear entirely adequate. On the three different “concretist” interpretations of ‘exist’, Modal Realism looks insufficient for genuine ontological commitment. Whereas, on the “multiverse” interpr…Read more
    Here I first raise an argument purporting to show that Lewis’ Modal Realism ends up being entirely trivial. But although I reject this line, the argument reveals how difficult it is to interpret Lewis’ thesis that possibilia “exist.” Five natural interpretations are considered, yet upon reflection, none appear entirely adequate. On the three different “concretist” interpretations of ‘exist’, Modal Realism looks insufficient for genuine ontological commitment. Whereas, on the “multiverse” interpretation, Modal Realism acknowledges physical possibilities only--and worse, (assuming either axiom S5 or axiom B) each possibilium ends up as a necessary physical existent. Finally, on the “broadly Actualist” of ‘exist’, Modal Realism is either inconsistent or it mistakenly identifies the unrestricted quantifier with the unrestricted Actualist quantifier. The upshot is that it remains obscure in what non-trivial sense Lewisian possibilia “exist.”.
    Quantified Modal LogicRussellian and Direct Reference Theories, MiscUnrestricted QuantificationQuant…Read more
    Quantified Modal LogicRussellian and Direct Reference Theories, MiscUnrestricted QuantificationQuantification and OntologyModal RealismActualism and Possibilism
  •  289
    An Objection to the Laplacean Chalmers
    Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 47 (1): 237-240. 2016.
    I discuss David Chalmers’ “scrutability thesis,” roughly that a Laplacean intellect could know every truth about the universe from a “compact class” of basic truths. It is argued that despite Chalmers’ remarks to the contrary, the thesis is problematic owing to quantum indeterminacy. Chalmers attempts to “frontload” various principles into the compact class to help out. But though frontloading may succeed in principle, Chalmers does not frontload enough to avoid the problem.
    Quantum Determinism and IndeterminismMethodology in MetaphysicsConceptual Analysis and A Priori Enta…Read more
    Quantum Determinism and IndeterminismMethodology in MetaphysicsConceptual Analysis and A Priori EntailmentSupervenience and Physicalism
  •  527
    Self‐Knowledge and Externalism about Empty Concepts
    Analytic Philosophy 56 (2): 158-168. 2015.
    Several authors have argued that, assuming we have apriori knowledge of our own thought-contents, semantic externalism implies that we can know apriori contingent facts about the empirical world. After presenting the argument, I shall respond by resisting the premise that an externalist can know apriori: If s/he has the concept water, then water exists. In particular, Boghossian's Dry Earth example suggests that such thought-experiments do not provide such apriori knowledge. Boghossian himself r…Read more
    Several authors have argued that, assuming we have apriori knowledge of our own thought-contents, semantic externalism implies that we can know apriori contingent facts about the empirical world. After presenting the argument, I shall respond by resisting the premise that an externalist can know apriori: If s/he has the concept water, then water exists. In particular, Boghossian's Dry Earth example suggests that such thought-experiments do not provide such apriori knowledge. Boghossian himself rejects the Dry Earth experiment, however, since it would imply that externalism is true of empty concepts as well as non-empty concepts. Yet in this paper I respond by defending empty-concept externalism, from criticisms suggested by Boghossian and Brown, and recently developed further by Besson. My contention is that an externalist can give a non-ad hoc descriptivist account of empty concepts. Accordingly, apriori self-knowledge does not enable an externalist to know contingent features of the external world.
    Twin Earth and ExternalismSocial ExternalismConcept PossessionThe A Priori, MiscExternalism and Armc…Read more
    Twin Earth and ExternalismSocial ExternalismConcept PossessionThe A Priori, MiscExternalism and Armchair KnowledgeReference Failure
  •  415
    In the Mental Fiction, Mental Fictionalism is Fictitious
    The Monist 96 (4): 605-621. 2013.
    Here I explore the prospects for fictionalism about the mental, modeled after fictionalism about possible worlds. Mental fictionalism holds that the mental states posited by folk psychology do not exist, yet that some sentences of folk psychological discourse are true. This is accomplished by construing truths of folk psychology as “truths according to the mentalistic fiction.” After formulating the view, I identify five ways that the view appears self-refuting. Moreover, I argue that this canno…Read more
    Here I explore the prospects for fictionalism about the mental, modeled after fictionalism about possible worlds. Mental fictionalism holds that the mental states posited by folk psychology do not exist, yet that some sentences of folk psychological discourse are true. This is accomplished by construing truths of folk psychology as “truths according to the mentalistic fiction.” After formulating the view, I identify five ways that the view appears self-refuting. Moreover, I argue that this cannot be fixed by semantic ascent or by a kind of primitivism. Even so, I also show that the “self-refutation” charges are subtly question-begging. Nevertheless, the reply reveals that a mental fictionalist ought to be a kind of quietist.
    Attitude Ascriptions, MiscMetaphysics of Mind, MiscModal FictionalismOntological FictionalismElimina…Read more
    Attitude Ascriptions, MiscMetaphysics of Mind, MiscModal FictionalismOntological FictionalismEliminativism about Propositional Attitudes
  •  429
    Self-Reflection for the Opaque Mind: An Essay in Neo-Sellarsian Philosophy
    Routledge. 2017.
    _Self-Reflection for the Opaque Mind_ attempts to solve a grave problem about critical self-reflection. Psychological studies indicate not just that we are bad at detecting our own "ego-threatening" thoughts; they also suggest that we are ignorant of even our ordinary thoughts. However, self-reflection presupposes an ability to know one’s own thoughts. So if ignorance is the norm, why attempt self-reflection? While admitting the psychological data, this book argues that we are infallible in a li…Read more
    _Self-Reflection for the Opaque Mind_ attempts to solve a grave problem about critical self-reflection. Psychological studies indicate not just that we are bad at detecting our own "ego-threatening" thoughts; they also suggest that we are ignorant of even our ordinary thoughts. However, self-reflection presupposes an ability to know one’s own thoughts. So if ignorance is the norm, why attempt self-reflection? While admitting the psychological data, this book argues that we are infallible in a limited range of self-discerning judgments—that in some cases, these judgments are self-fulfilling or self-verifying. Even so, infallibility does not imply indubitability, and the author does not wish to provide a "foundation" for empirical knowledge. The point is rather to explain how self-reflection as a rational activity is possible. The book will be of interest to scholars working on the issue of self-reflection across a wide range of disciplines, including philosophy, psychology, and cognitive science.
    Knowledge-WhExpression-Based Accounts of Self-KnowledgeThe Nature of ReasoningExternalism and Self-K…Read more
    Knowledge-WhExpression-Based Accounts of Self-KnowledgeThe Nature of ReasoningExternalism and Self-Knowledge, MiscInfallibility and Incorrigibility In Self-KnowledgeWilfrid SellarsFirst-Person Authority and Privileged AccessExternalism and Slow SwitchingExternalism and Armchair Knowledge
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