•  46
    Kant's compatibilism
    Cornell University Press. 1994.
    I begin this study with a review of the 18th-century figures, Leibniz, Wolff, Crusius, Hume and the pre-critical Kant concerning causation, free will and compatibilism. This review provides the background for an investigation into and a reconstruction of Kant's thesis of the compatibility of causal determinism and human freedom. I formulate Kant's argument for causal determinism and present his defense of that argument, devoting an extended discussion to the recent literature regarding its key p…Read more
  •  3
    Kant's Aesthetics
    with Ralf Meerbote
    Ridgeview Publishing Company. 1991.
  •  76
    The metaphysics of hyperspace
    Oxford University Press. 2005.
    Hud Hudson offers a fascinating examination of philosophical reasons to believe in hyperspace. He explores non-theistic reasons in the first chapter and theistic ones towards the end; in the intervening sections he inquires into a variety of puzzles in the metaphysics of material objects that are either generated by the hypothesis of hyperspace or else informed by it, with discussions of receptacles, boundaries, contact, occupation, and superluminal motion. Anyone engaged with contemporary metap…Read more
  •  368
    Simples and gunk
    Philosophy Compass 2 (2). 2007.
    Are there any non‐composite objects? Are there any objects every part of which is composite? Are items of either kind even possible? What would they be like? Of what significance would they be? How best can we come to have reasonable beliefs about the answers to these inquiries? Such questions – about the actuality and possibility, the analysis and significance, the methodology and epistemology of simples and pieces of gunk – have been center stage in recent contemporary analytic metaphysics. Th…Read more
  •  186
    Omnipresence
    In Thomas P. Flint & Michael Rea (eds.), The Oxford handbook of philosophical theology, Oxford University Press. 2008.
    According to the tradition of western theism, God is said to enjoy the attribute of being everywhere present. But what is it, exactly, for God to manifest ubiquitous presence? Well, presumably, it is for God to bear a certain relation – the ‘being present at’ relation – to every place. This article focuses on the ‘being present at’ relation which figures so prominently in the divine attribute of omnipresence, on both fundamental and derivative readings of that relation, and on a host of philosop…Read more
  •  104
    Immanent Causality and Diachronic Composition: A Reply to Balashov
    Philosophical Papers 32 (1): 15-22. 2003.
    Philosophical Papers Vol.32(1) 2003: 15-22
  •  33
    Universalism, Four Dimensionalism, and Vagueness
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 60 (3): 547-560. 2000.
    Anyone who endorses Universalism and Four Dimensionalism owes us an argument for those controversial mereological theses. One may put forth David Lewis’s and Ted Sider’s arguments from vagueness. However, the success of those arguments depends on the rejection of the epistemic view of vagueness, and thus opens the door to a fatal confrontation with one particularly troubling version of The Problem of the Many. The alternative for friends of Universalism and Four Dimensionalism is to abandon thos…Read more
  •  265
    Brute facts
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 75 (1). 1997.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  64
    The Fall and Hypertime
    Oxford University Press. 2014.
    Hud Hudson shows that apparently irreconcilable conflicts between science and religion often turn out to be misdescribed battles about negotiable philosophical assumptions. He defends an original Hypertime Hypothesis which reconciles the Christian doctrines of The Fall and Original Sin with reigning scientific orthodoxy
    Sin
  • A familiar problem
    Oxford Studies in Metaphysics 2 387. 2006.
  •  85
    Lesser Kinds Quartet
    The Monist 90 (3): 333-348. 2007.