•  73
    Donald Davidson: Meaning, Truth, Language, and Reality (review)
    International Philosophical Quarterly 46 (2): 245-246. 2006.
  •  664
    Bipolarity and Sense in the Tractatus
    Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy 2 (9). 2014.
    Although the terms ‘poles’, ‘bipolar’, and ‘bipolarity’ do not appear in the Tractatus, it is widely held that Wittgenstein maintained his commitment to bipolarity in the Tractatus. As it is usually understood, the principle of bipolarity is that every proposition must be capable of being true and capable of being false, which rules out propositions that are necessarily true or necessarily false. Here I argue that Wittgenstein was committed to bipolarity in the Tractatus, but getting a clear vie…Read more
  •  527
    Conceiving of Pain
    with Brendan O'Sullivan
    Dialogue 47 (2): 351-376. 2008.
    In this article we aim to see how far one can get in defending the identity thesis without challenging the inference from conceivability to possibility. Our defence consists of a dilemma for the modal argument. Either “pain” is rigid or it is not. If it is not rigid, then a key premise of the modal argument can be rejected. If it is rigid, the most plausible semantic account treats “pain” as a natural-kind term that refers to its causal or historical origin, namely, C-fibre stimulation. It follo…Read more