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Kenneth Rankin

University of Victoria
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    59
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    • Topics
  •  News and Updates
    16

 More details
  • University of Victoria
    Department of Philosophy
    Professor Emeritus
University of Edinburgh
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1955
Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
Areas of Specialization
Philosophy of Action
Philosophy of Mind
Areas of Interest
Metaphysics
Philosophy of Action
Philosophy of Language
Philosophy of Mind
  • All publications (59)
  •  457
    Karl Pfeifer, Actions and Other Events: The Unifier-Multiplier Controversy Reviewed by
    Philosophy in Review 12 (2): 133-135. 1992.
    EventsThe Nature of ActionSpecific Agentive PhenomenaAction Theory, Miscellaneous
  •  79
    Existence and time
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 27 (2): 199-215. 1966.
    Philosophy of Time, Misc
  •  1
    ANSCOMBE, G. E. M. -Intention (review)
    Mind 68 (n/a): 261. 1959.
    The Structure of ActionNoncausal Theories of ActionIntentional ActionKnowledge of ActionMotivationIn…Read more
    The Structure of ActionNoncausal Theories of ActionIntentional ActionKnowledge of ActionMotivationIntention and KnowledgeReasons and CausesPsychological ExplanationAgency
  •  79
    The Non-Causal Self-Fulfillment of Intention
    American Philosophical Quarterly 9 (4). 1972.
    Causal Theory of ActionIntentional ActionThe Nature of Intention
  •  1
    PEARS, D. F. : "Freedom and the will" (review)
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 41 (n/a): 277. 1963.
  •  105
    McTaggart, Mereology, Substance and Change
    Dialogue 21 (1): 57-78. 1982.
    McTaggart maintained that, without the kind of change which events undergo in passing from the future through the present into the past, how things are would be fundamentally different from how they appear. More particularly Without A-change there could be no change at all. Without any change there could be no time. Without A-change there could be no time.
    SubstanceMereology
  •  85
    Intentionality and Tense
    Dialogue 32 (2): 383-. 1993.
    Temporal Experience, MiscThe Passage of Time, Misc
  •  85
    Can and Might
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 1 (1). 1971.
    Against Richard Taylor's position (Action and Purpose,Prentice Hall,1966) that there is some further factor in agency that in one of its roles supplements the contingency of an action that is freely performed
    Philosophy of Action, Misc
  •  36
    Wittgenstein on Meaning, Understanding, and Intending
    American Philosophical Quarterly 3 (1). 1966.
  •  123
    McTaggart's Paradox: Two Parodies
    Philosophy 56 (217). 1981.
    To be truly provocative and outrageous the superior philosophical sophistry will commonly possess four somewhat adventitious features. I shall rate it as classic if it has all four. First, and least adventitiously, the argument will be crisp and initially seductive. Second, by the standard the sophistry sets direct rebuttal will be laborious and diffuse. Third, the recipe for the latter will prescribe that we pick out some hitherto unarticulated logical principle such that if the principle be tr…Read more
    To be truly provocative and outrageous the superior philosophical sophistry will commonly possess four somewhat adventitious features. I shall rate it as classic if it has all four. First, and least adventitiously, the argument will be crisp and initially seductive. Second, by the standard the sophistry sets direct rebuttal will be laborious and diffuse. Third, the recipe for the latter will prescribe that we pick out some hitherto unarticulated logical principle such that if the principle be true then the sophistical argument must be invalid, and then, on the strength of that consequence assume the principle to be true. Consequently and fourth, as an antidote parody is supreme. With a persuasive absence of fuss and bias we can turn the tables if we show that, if the sophistical argument were really valid, then some structurally similar argument would prove just as consummately far too much. In short, from the rhetorical point of view at least, Gaunilo is more lethal than Kant. Even if the similarity is defective, the sophist will lose some of his adventitious and insufferable poise, if he ventures to show why.
    McTaggart's Argument
  •  105
    The complete reality of substance
    Mind 91 (363): 377-397. 1982.
    Substance
  •  76
    Order and disorder in time
    Mind 66 (263): 363-378. 1957.
    Philosophy of Time, MiscPsychopathology
  •  73
    Kierkegaard und der Verfuhrer
    Philosophical Quarterly 2 (9): 375. 1952.
  • GRIFFIN, JAMES: "Wittgenstein's logical atomism" (review)
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 42 (n/a): 439. 1964.
    Logical AtomismLudwig Wittgenstein
  • BROAD, C. D. - "The Philosophy of", ed. P. A. Schilpp (review)
    Mind 71 (n/a): 117. 1962.
  •  62
    The role of imagination, rule‐operations, and atmosphere in Wittgenstein's language‐games
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 10 (1-4): 279-291. 1967.
    Wittgenstein argues that understanding a language consists of mastery of techniques for playing language‐games rather than some sort of mental state or episode such as mental imagery, rule invocation, or atmosphere investing our experience of words. His elimination of the three mentalistic alternatives presupposes the peculiar distinction, or its virtual lack, between speaker and listener presupposed by his positive claim, instead of establishing the latter. This paper vindicates the episodic na…Read more
    Wittgenstein argues that understanding a language consists of mastery of techniques for playing language‐games rather than some sort of mental state or episode such as mental imagery, rule invocation, or atmosphere investing our experience of words. His elimination of the three mentalistic alternatives presupposes the peculiar distinction, or its virtual lack, between speaker and listener presupposed by his positive claim, instead of establishing the latter. This paper vindicates the episodic nature of certain types of understanding, and gives each of his three alternatives a suitably qualified role therein, by drawing the distinctions in a less biassed way.
    ImaginationLudwig Wittgenstein
  •  105
    Rule and reality
    Philosophical Quarterly 11 (43): 145-157. 1961.
    Aspects of IntentionalityRule-Following
  •  41
    Choice and Chance
    with C. A. Campbell
    Philosophical Quarterly 13 (50): 85. 1963.
  •  100
    More on the deterministic windmill
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 42 (3). 1964.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  357
    Is the third man argument an inconsistent triad?
    Philosophical Quarterly 20 (81): 378-380. 1970.
    To understand the tma we should follow a rule of polemical force as well as a rule of validity. Following just the latter vlastos renders the explicit theory of forms and the two suppressed premises as an inconsistent triad. But the rule of polemical force indicates that the explicit theory is ambivalent. Just one f-Ness must be the basis, Either for any f thing being f, Or for any set of f things being just that set. It cannot be the basis for all f things being f
    Plato: Metaphysics
  •  98
    Causal modalities and alternative action
    Philosophical Quarterly 7 (29): 289-304. 1957.
    The Nature of ActionCausal Theory of Action
  •  77
    X.—critical notices
    Mind 68 (270): 261-264. 1959.
    C. D. Broad
  •  71
    Ayer's anti-phenomenalism
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 36 (2). 1958.
    This Article does not have an abstract
    PhenomenalismAspects of Consciousness
  •  158
    The duplicity of Plato's third man
    Mind 78 (310): 178-197. 1969.
    Plato: Third Man Argument
  •  84
    On bringing mrs. Foot out of Coventry: A tribute to D. Nolan Kaiser
    Mind 80 (320): 612-613. 1971.
  •  146
    Linguistic analysis and the justification of induction
    Philosophical Quarterly 5 (21): 316-328. 1955.
    Justification of Induction
  • HITROW, G. J.: "The Natural Philosophy of Time" (review)
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 40 (n/a): 249. 1962.
  • BUNGE, M. - "Causality: The Place of the Principle in Modern Science" (review)
    Mind 70 (n/a): 107. 1961.
  •  80
    The Refutation of Determinism: An Essay in Philosophical Logic
    with M. R. Ayers
    Philosophical Review 80 (1): 106. 1971.
    Determinism
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