•  146
    Quinean Naturalism in Question
    Philo 11 (1): 5-18. 2008.
    This paper is a critical discussion of Quine’s naturalist credos: (1) physicalism; (2) there is no first philosophy; (3) philosophy is continuous with science; and (4) the only responsible theory of the world as a whole is scientific theory. The aim is to show that Quine’s formulations admit of two readings: a strong reading (often Quine’s own) which is compatible with reductive forms of naturalism but implausible; and a mild reading which is plausible but suggestive of more liberal forms of nat…Read more
  •  53
    In Stanley Cavell’s ethical universe, no concept is of more moment than that of acknowledgement. In Cavell’s view, the question of acknowledgement is not a matter of choice but is at issue whenever we confront, or are confronted by, others. To acknowledge is to admit or confess or reveal to someone, typically another, those things about oneself and one’s relations to the world and others that one, being human, cannot fail to know – except that “nothing is more human than to deny them”. The quest…Read more
  • Introduction: Science, naturalism, and the problem of normativity
    In Mario De Caro & David Macarthur (eds.), Naturalism and Normativity, Cambridge University Press. 2010.
  •  63
    This paper offers a reading of The Awful Truth in order to meditate further on Stanley Cavell's articulation of the themes of the ordinary and perfectionist marriage as exemplified in the genre of films he calls the Hollywood Comedy of Remarriage in Cavell and . I explore different ways in which this film and the medium of film generally are capable of making the unseen visible: revealing the ordinary that is hidden behind its very familiarity; making available an awareness that we are unseen by…Read more
  •  191
    Putnam's natural realism and the question of a perceptual interface
    Philosophical Explorations 7 (2): 167-181. 2004.
    In his Dewey Lectures,1 Hilary Putnam argues that contemporary philosophy cannot solve nor see its way past the traditional problem of how language or thought hooks on to.
  • Review of Nigel Warburton, The Art Question (review)
    Literature and Aesthetics 20 (2): 147. 2010.
  •  32
    The Seriousness of Doubt and Our Natural Trust in the Senses in the First Meditation
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 33 (2): 159-181. 2003.
    In the present paper I shall argue that the real problem here is the very idea that there is a dilemma that compels us to choose sides. We can hold both that the meditator's doubts are fully serious, and that they leave the perspective of common sense largely unscathed. The key to dissolving the dilemma is to see that the meditator observes a distinction between two levels of epistemic standards: the very demanding standards appropriate to certainty, understood in a rather technical sense of tha…Read more
  •  244
    McDowell, scepticism, and the 'veil of perception'
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 81 (2): 175-190. 2003.
    McDowell has argued that external world scepticism is a pressing problem only in so far as we accept, on the basis of the argument from illusion, the claim that perceiving that p and hallucinating that p involve a highest common factor.
  •  140
    Naturalism and Normativity (edited book)
    Cambridge University Press. 2010.
    Normativity concerns what we ought to think or do and the evaluations we make. For example, we say that we ought to think consistently, we ought to keep our promises, or that Mozart is a better composer than Salieri. Yet what philosophical moral can we draw from the apparent absence of normativity in the scientific image of the world? For scientific naturalists, the moral is that the normative must be reduced to the nonnormative, while for nonnaturalists, the moral is that there must be a transc…Read more
  •  2
    In contrast to the recent trend of taking external world skepticism as a narrow problem for a demanding conception of "objective" or "certain" knowledge about the world, my thesis offers a re-examination of the distinctively perceptual basis of the skeptical problem. On my view the skeptic challenges the very possibility of rationally justifying beliefs in so far as they are based on sense experience, a characterization that helps to explain the continuity into the modern period of the ancient s…Read more
  •  25
    Review of Possibilities of Perception by Jennifer Church
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 93 (1): 178-182. 2015.
  •  133
    Introduction - the nature of naturalism
    In Mario De Caro & David Macarthur (eds.), Naturalism in question, Harvard University Press. pp. 1-20. 2004.
    The critical concern of the present volume is contemporary naturalism, both in its scientific version and as represented by newly emerging hopes for another, philosophically more liberal, naturalism.1 The papers collected here are state-of-the-art discussions that question the appeal, rational motivations, and presuppositions of scientific naturalism across a broad range of philosophical topics. As an alternative to scientific naturalism, we offer the outlines of a new non- reductive form of nat…Read more
  •  1
    Taking the Human Sciences Seriously
    In Mario De Caro & David Macarthur (eds.), Naturalism and Normativity, Cambridge University Press. 2010.
  •  45
    Reflections on “Architecture is a Gesture” (Wittgenstein)
    Paragrana: Internationale Zeitschrift für Historische Anthropologie 23 (1): 88-100. 2014.
  •  71
    The present paper challenges the narrow scientistic conception of Nature that underlies current projects of naturalization involving, say, evaluative or intentional discourse. It is more plausible to hold that science provides only a partial characterization of the natural world. I consider McDowell's articulation of a more liberal naturalism, one which recognizes autonomous normative facts about reasons, meanings and values, as genuine constituents of Nature on a more liberal conception of it. …Read more
  •  187
    Naturalism in question (edited book)
    Harvard University Press. 2004.
    This volume presents a group of leading thinkers who criticize scientific naturalism not in the name of some form of supernaturalism, but in order to defend a ...
  •  113
    Skepticism, Self-knowledge and Responsibility
    In Stephen Hetherington (ed.), Aspects of Knowing, Elsevier. pp. 97. 2006.
    Modern skepticism can be usefully divided into two camps: the Cartesian and the Humean.1 Cartesian skepticism is a matter of a theoretical doubt that has little or no practical import in our everyday lives. Its employment concerns whether or not we can achieve a special kind of certain knowledge – something Descartes calls “scientia” 2—that is far removed from our everyday aims or standards of epistemic appraisal. Alternatively, Humean skepticism engages the ancient skeptical concern with whethe…Read more
  •  110
    Putnam, pragmatism and the fate of metaphysics
    European Journal of Analytic Philosophy 4 (2): 33-46. 2008.
    In Renewing Philosophy (1992), having surveyed a number of metaphysical programs in contemporary analytic philosophy, including Bernard Williams’ appeal to an absolute conception of the world, Ruth Millikan’s attempt to reduce intentionality to biological function, and Nelson Goodman’s irrealism, Putnam concludes as follows: I have argued that the decision of a large part of contemporary analytic philosophy to become a form of metaphysics is a mistake. Indeed, contemporary analytic metaphysics i…Read more
  •  102
    Reviewing the state of play in the attempt to naturalise content a quarter of a century after John Haugeland’s survey paper “The Intentionality All-Stars”, Dan Hutto and Glenda Satne propose a new naturalistic account of content that supposedly synthesizes what is best in the three failed programs of neo-Cartesianism, neo-Behaviourism and neo-Pragmatism. They propose to appeal to a Relaxed Naturalism, a non-reductive genealogical form of explanation and a primitive notion of contentless ur-inten…Read more
  •  151
    Review of Wittgenstein and Scepticism - Edited by Denis Mcmanus (review)
    Philosophical Books 48 (2): 168-170. 2007.
    Wittgenstein has been likened to a Pyrrhonian sceptic, one who employs dialectical skills to avoid rather than defend doctrine, but it is his role in exposing and excavating the sands upon which modern scepticisms have been built that is the subject of this new volume of largely original essays. The first three chapters, by Crispin Wright, Akeel Bilgrami and Michael Williams find inspiration in On Certainty for singling out key moves in the initial set-up of external world scepticism; the next f…Read more