James Trafford

University For The Creative Arts
  •  133
    Contemporary Debates in Philosophy of Mind
    Philosophical Psychology 24 (1): 139-143. 2011.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  788
    Inference and Rational Commitment
    Prolegomena 12 (1): 5-20. 2013.
    This peer-reviewed paper intervenes in debates relating to overarching themes that impact upon mass media studies, communication theory and theories of cognition more generally. In particular, the paper discusses issues involving how our ordinary psychological thinking relates to norms of rationality (and how these latter are conceived). In essence, I argue against a dominant approach taken by Christopher Peacocke, that rationality can be grounded in the possession of certain concepts. The artic…Read more
  •  105
    This peer-reviewed paper investigates the dominant underlying approach to aesthetic experience and conscious experience more generally – that is, a neo-Kantian phenomenological approach. In essence, I argue that such approaches are based on a petitio principii in relation to what I call the 'principle of appearing qua appearing' – a principle that, I suggest, underlies the dominant approach to aesthetic perception. So, the ramifications of this argument are that we ought to question the dominanc…Read more
  •  1777
    Co-constructive logic for proofs and refutations
    Studia Humana 3 (4): 22-40. 2014.
    This paper considers logics which are formally dual to intuitionistic logic in order to investigate a co-constructive logic for proofs and refutations. This is philosophically motivated by a set of problems regarding the nature of constructive truth, and its relation to falsity. It is well known both that intuitionism can not deal constructively with negative information, and that defining falsity by means of intuitionistic negation leads, under widely-held assumptions, to a justification of biv…Read more
  •  155
    Modal Rationalism and the Transference of Meaning
    Croatian Journal of Philosophy 10 (2): 97-107. 2010.
    The lesson is familiar. Kripke’s arguments in favor of a posteriori necessary truths annul the idea that conceivability is a guide to metaphysical possibility because determining that which is a priori is a separate issue from determining that which is necessary. Modal rationalists do not completely agree with this conclusion. Following recent work on two-dimensional semantics, David Chalmers suggests that two distinct semantic values can be assigned to a statement, depending on whether we consi…Read more
  •  5
    Communicating Content
    with Alexandros Tillas
    Language and Communication 40 1-13. 2015.
    This paper aims to develop a unified account of communication, competence and reference fixing that surpasses problems with two of the most influential views on the philosophical market, neodescriptivism and the 'locking' theory. Our charge is that the conditions upon communication are less substantive than the neo-descriptivist account requires and the conditions upon reference-fixing are more substantive than those provided by the locking-view. In order to avoid the problems that neodescriptiv…Read more
  •  86
    Duality and Inferential Semantics
    Axiomathes 25 (4): 495-513. 2015.
    It is well known that classical inferentialist semantics runs into problems regarding abnormal valuations. It is equally well known that the issues can be resolved if we construct the inference relation in a multiple-conclusion sequent calculus. The latter has been prominently developed in recent work by Restall, with the guiding interpretation that the valid sequent says that the simultaneous assertion of all of Γ with the denial of all of Δ is incoherent. However, such structures face signific…Read more
  •  45
    Review of Torin Alter and Sven Walter Phenomenal Concepts and Phenomenal Knowledge: New Essays on Consciousness and Physicalism (review)
    PSYCHE: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Research On Consciousness 15 (2). 2009.
    Phenomenal Concepts and Phenomenal Knowledge is an edited volume of new essays relating to the debates around phenomenal experience in philosophy of mind. Alter and Walter provide an excellent introduction to the volume, producing a well edited collection of papers that represent some of the most interesting and cutting edge work in the field, and together provide a subtle and complex overview of the contemporary theoretical landscape. In addition, as many of the papers refer to others within th…Read more
  •  711
    Compositionality and modest inferentialism
    Teorema: International Journal of Philosophy (1): 39-56. 2014.
    This paper provides both a solution and a problem for the account of compositionality in Christopher Peacocke’s modest inferentialism. The immediate issue facing Peacocke’s account is that it looks as if compositionality can only be understood at the level of semantics, which is difficult to reconcile with inferentialism. Here, following up a brief suggestion by Peacocke, I provide a formal framework wherein compositionality occurs the level of the determining relation between inference and sema…Read more