Rae Langton

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  •  4
    Blocking as Counter-Speech
    In Daniel Fogal, Daniel W. Harris & Matt Moss (eds.), New Work on Speech Acts, Oxford University Press. 2018.
    The felicity conditions for speech acts can be supplied, in part, by hearers and bystanders, as Austin and Lewis showed, in their work on speech acts and accommodation respectively.This has implications for counter-speech: efforts to fight harmful speech with more speech. Counter-speech can work by retroactively ‘undoing’, rather than refuting, speech acts. Despite the handicaps on counter-speech, a hearer can sometimes block its presuppositions, including presuppositions about its authority. Th…Read more
  •  62
    Humility and Coexistence in Kant and Lewis
    In Barry Loewer & Jonathan Schaffer (eds.), A companion to David Lewis, Wiley-blackwell. 2015.
    This chapter discusses two common themes: first, an argument about ignorance of things in themselves, viewed as a kind of epistemic humility; and, second, an argument, perhaps even a transcendental argument about the conditions of coexistence, the relation that world mates bear to each other. In Kant's early work, he explored the metaphysically necessary conditions of coexistence in his early work, and later, the “transcendentally” necessary conditions of the experience of coexistence. Many of K…Read more
  •  190
    Slaves to Fashion?
    In Jessica Wolfendale & Jeanette Kennett (eds.), Fashion - Philosophy for Everyone: Thinking with Style, Wiley. 2011.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Objectification Physical Bonds? Moral Bonds? Epistemological Bonds? The Upshot.
  •  114
    Empathy and animal ethics
    In Dale Jamieson (ed.), Singer and His Critics, Wiley-blackwell. 1999.
    In responding to the challenge that we cannot know that animals feel pain, Peter Singer says: We can never directly experience the pain of another being, whether that being is human or not. When I see my daughter fall and scrape her knee, I know that she feels pain because of the way she behaves—she cries, she tells me her knee hurts, she rubs the sore spot, and so on. I know that I myself behave in a somewhat similar—if more inhibited—way when I feel pain, and so I accept that my daughter feels…Read more
  •  863
    Language and Race
    In Gillian Russell & Delia Graff Fara (eds.), Routledge Companion to Philosophy of Language, Routledge. pp. 753-767. 2013.
    What is the point of language? If we begin with that abstract question, we may be tempted towards a high-minded answer: “People say things to get other people to come to know things that they didn't know before” (Stalnaker, 2002, 703). The point is truth, knowledge, communication. If we begin with a concrete question, “What has language to do with race?” we find a different point: to attack, spread hatred, create racial hierarchy. The mere practice of racial categorization is controversial: are …Read more
  •  161
    Animals and Alternatives
    The Philosophers' Magazine 81 14-15. 2018.
  •  108
    Defining ‘Intrinsic’
    In Robert M. Francescotti (ed.), Companion to Intrinsic Properties, De Gruyter. pp. 17-30. 2014.
  •  121
    Marshall and Parsons on 'Intrinsic'
    with David Lewis
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 63 (2): 353. 2001.
    Dan Marshall and Josh Parsons note, correctly. that the property of being either a cube or accompanied by a cube is incorrectly classified as intrinsic under the definition we have given unless it turns out to be disjunctive. Whether it is disjunctive, under the definition we gave, turns on certain judgements of the relative naturalness of properties. They doubt the judgements of relative naturalness that would classify their property as disjunctive. We disagree. They also suggest that the whole…Read more
  •  825
    Defining 'intrinsic'
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 58 (2): 333-345. 1998.
    Something could be round even if it were the only thing in the universe, unaccompanied by anything distinct from itself. Jaegwon Kim once suggested that we define an intrinsic property as one that can belong to something unaccompanied. Wrong: unaccompaniment itself is not intrinsic, yet it can belong to something unaccompanied. But there is a better Kim-style definition. Say that P is independent of accompaniment iff four different cases are possible: something accompanied may have P or lack P, …Read more
  •  365
    Subordination, Silencing, and Two Ideas of Illocution (review)
    Jurisprudence 2 (2): 379-440. 2011.
    This section gathers together five reviews of Rae Langton?s book Sexual Solipsism: Philosophical Essays on Pornography and Objectification followed by a response from the author.
  •  153
    Comment définir « intrinsèque »
    with David Lewis
    Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 4 (4): 511-527. 2002.
    Jaegwon Kim définissait une propriété intrinsèque comme une propriété compatible avec le fait que l’objet ne serait accompagné d’aucun autre être contingent. Mais cela impliquerait que la solitude serait une propriété intrinsèque, or c’est une propriété extrinsèque. Les auteurs définissent une propriété intrinsèque de base comme une propriété indépendante de la solitude et de l’accompagnement et qui n’est ni une propriété disjonctive ni une négation de propriété disjonctive. Deux doubles intrins…Read more
  • Disenfranchised Silence
    In Michael Smith, Robert Goodin & Geoffrey Geoffrey (eds.), Common Minds, Oxford University Press. 2007.
  •  372
    Lies and back-door lies
    Mind 130 (517): 251-258. 2021.
  •  585
    Elusive Knowledge of Things in Themselves
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 82 (1): 129-136. 2004.
    Kant argued that we have no knowledge of things in themselves, no knowledge of the intrinsic properties of things, a thesis that is not idealism but epistemic humility. David Lewis agrees (in 'Ramseyan Humility'), but for Ramseyan reasons rather than Kantian. I compare the doctrines of Ramseyan and Kantian humility, and argue that Lewis's contextualist strategy for rescuing knowledge from the sceptic (proposed elsewhere) should also rescue knowledge of things in themselves. The rescue would not …Read more
  •  278
    IV—Empathy and First-Personal Imagining
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 119 (1): 77-104. 2019.
    Empathy is ‘first-personal’ in at least two ways. When my brother is on the rack, it is ‘by the imagination’ that I grasp how it is for him, wrote Adam Smith. I imagine him de se, with the indexical first person: I self-ascribe being in that situation, and, more mysteriously, being him in that situation. Moreover, I imagine him subjectively, with a first personal phenomenology that somehow captures what the suffering is like. Subjective and de se imagining are distinct, but have each been herald…Read more
  •  125
    ‘Real Grounds’ in Matter and Things in Themselves
    Kantian Review 23 (3): 435-448. 2018.
    Matter’s real essence is a ground for certain features of phenomena. Things in themselves are likewise a ground for certain features of phenomena. How do these claims relate? The former is a causal essentialism about physics, Stang argues; and the features so grounded are phenomenally nomically necessary. The latter involves a distinctive ontology of things in themselves, I argue; but the features so grounded are not noumenally nomically necessary. Stang’s version of Kant’s modal metaphysics is …Read more
  •  30
    Précis of Problems from Kant
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 66 (1): 190-195. 2003.
    Kant’s distinction between phenomena and things in themselves is an expression of his idealism, according to Van Cleve: it is a distinction between the virtual and the real. Phenomena are virtual objects, logical constructions of conscious states; things in themselves are real objects. We thus have a metaphysics of two worlds, a distinction between ‘things having genuine existence and things existing merely as intentional objects’. And we have an epistemology which makes ignorance of things in t…Read more
  •  214
    Virtues of Resentment
    Utilitas 13 (2): 255. 2001.
    On a consequentialist account of virtue, a trait is virtuous if it has good consequences, vicious if it has bad. Clumsiness and dimness are therefore vices. Should I resent the clumsy and the dim?, says the consequentialist, counterintuitively - at any rate, Yes’ on an accuracy measure of resentment's virtue: resentment should be an accurate response to consequentialist vice, and these are vices. On a usefulness measure of resentment's virtue, the answer may be different: whether resentment is v…Read more
  •  842
    Duty and Desolation
    Philosophy 67 (262). 1992.
    This is a paper about two philosophers who wrote to each other. One is famous; the other is not. It is about two practical standpoints, the strategic and the human, and what the famous philosopher said of them. And it is about friendship and deception, duty and despair. That is enough by way of preamble
  •  3
    1 The musical, the magical, and the mathematical soul1
    In Tim Crane & Sarah Patterson (eds.), History of the Mind-Body Problem, Routledge. pp. 13. 2000.
  •  660
    Rae Langton here draws together her ground-breaking and contentious work on pornography and objectification. She shows how women come to be objectified -- made subordinate and treated as things -- and she argues for the controversial feminist conclusions that pornography subordinates and silences women, and women have rights against pornography.
  •  52
    Sprechakte und unsprechbare Akte
    In Hannes Kuch, Sybille Krämer & Steffen K. Herrmann (eds.), Verletzende Worte: Die Grammatik Sprachlicher Missachtung, Transcript Verlag. pp. 107-146. 2007.
  •  220
    Sexual Solipsism
    Philosophical Topics 23 (2): 149-187. 1995.
  • Seksualny solipsyzm
    Analiza I Egzystencja 30 5-60. 2015.
  •  128
    Reply to Lorne Falkenstein
    Kantian Review 5 64-72. 2001.
    In Kantian Humility I argue that, for Kant, ignorance of things in themselves is ignorance of the intrinsic properties of substances, and that this is epistemic humility, rather than idealism: some aspects of reality, the intrinsic aspects, are beyond our epistemic grasp.The interpretation draws upon what Falkenstein takes to be ‘a novel and not implausible understanding of Kant's distinction between things in themselves and appearances’ which views it as a distinction between the intrinsic and …Read more