•  104
    Correspondence via the Backdoor and Other Stories
    Disputatio 1 (14): 2-21. 2003.
    Much has been written of late concerning the relative virtues and views of correspondence and deflationary theories of Truth. What is troubling, however, is that it is not always entirely clear exactly what distinguishes different conceptions of truth. Characterizations of the distinction are often vague and sometimes vary from writer to writer. One central thing I want to do here is to diagnose the source of the difficulty in providing a clear characterization of the distinction. In light of th…Read more
  •  290
    The inessential quasi-indexical
    Philosophical Studies 145 (2). 2009.
    In this paper, I argue, contra Perry, that the existence of locating beliefs does not require the abandonment of the analysis of belief as a relation between subjects and propositions. I argue that what the "problem of the essential indexical" reveals is that a complete explanation of behaviour requires both an explanation of the type of behaviour the agent engaged in and an explanation of why she engaged in it in the circumstances that she did. And I develop an account of belief which encompass…Read more
  •  82
    The Parliamentarian's Reply
    Dialogue 48 (3): 665. 2009.
  •  936
    Mario De Caro and David Macarthur, eds., Naturalism in Question Reviewed by (review)
    Philosophy in Review 25 (2): 101-104. 2005.
    Book review: no abstract needed, despite what this program might demand.
  •  411
    My main reaction to MCGivern’s paper was one of dialectical puzzlement. Block argues that, Macro Non-Reduction: [all] macro properties are irreducible to the micro properties on which they supervene..
  •  128
    Between the lines of age: Reflections on the metaphysics of words
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 86 (2). 2005.
    The central concern of this paper is the nature of the relation between words on the one hand and their occurrences on the other. I argue here that while Kaplan's “common currency” conception of words is immune to much of the criticism to which Cappelen has subjected it, it runs afoul of the role words play in communication. And I sketch an alternative conception – the type‐continuant model – which shares the virtues but avoids the vices of Kaplan's conception.
  •  92
  •  98
    Simple and Sophisticated "Naive" Semantics
    Dialogue 39 (1): 101-122. 2000.
    RésuméJe critique dans cet article la théorie «naïve»des attributions de croyances, selon laquelle la signification d'un nom propre dans la clause qui figure comme complément d'une telle attribution est son référent. Je soutiens que l'usage que nous faisons de ces attributions dans l'explication du comportement oblige à rejeter la version simple de la sémantique «naïve» au profit de sa cousine plus sophistiquée. Et je soutiens que la théorie «naïve» sophistiquée se compare défavorablement à des …Read more