•  248
    Phenomenal Sorites Paradoxes and Looking the Same
    Dialectica 65 (3): 327-344. 2011.
    Taking a series of colour patches, starting with one that clearly looks red, and making each so similar in colour to the previous one that it looks the same as it, we appear to be able to show that a yellow patch looks red. I ask whether phenomenal sorites paradoxes, such as this, are subject to a unique kind of solution that is unavailable in relation to other sorites paradoxes. I argue that they do not need such a solution, nor do they succumb to one. In particular, I reject the claim made by …Read more
  •  110
    Special issue on vagueness
    with Libor Běhounek
    Studia Logica 90 (3): 287-289. 2008.
  •  788
    Supervaluationism, Indirect Speech Reports, and Demonstratives
    In Richard Dietz & Sebastiano Moruzzi (eds.), Cuts and clouds: vagueness, its nature, and its logic, Oxford University Press. 2010.
    Can supervaluationism successfully handle indirect speech reports? This chapter considers, and rejects, Schiffer’s claim that they cannot. One alleged problem with indirect speech reports is that the truth of “Carla said that Bob is tall” implausibly requires that Carla said all of a huge number of precise things (i.e. that Bob was over n feet tall, for values of n corresponding to precisifications of “tall”). The paper shows why the supervaluationist is not committed to this. Vague singular ter…Read more
  •  394
    Relative validity and vagueness
    In Jonathan Lear & Alex Oliver (eds.), The Force of Argument: Essays in Honor of Timothy Smiley, Routledge. 2015.
    This paper considers the classification in terms of "relative validity" of arguments that are taken to be good arguments in an informal setting, despite not being strictly or absolutely valid. It employs Timothy Smiley’s framework for relative validity in his ‘A tale of two tortoises’ (1995). Everyday arguments can rely on rules of inference that are not formally valid: such rules can be presumed to be good ones in the context, just as context can justify suppressed premises relied upon in other…Read more
  •  6
    Context, Vagueness, and the Sorites
    In J. C. Beall (ed.), Liars and Heaps, Oxford University Press Uk. 2004.
  •  173
    Degrees of belief, expected and actual
    Synthese 194 (10): 3789-3800. 2017.
    A framework of degrees of belief, or credences, is often advocated to model our uncertainty about how things are or will turn out. It has also been employed in relation to the kind of uncertainty or indefiniteness that arises due to vagueness, such as when we consider “a is F” in a case where a is borderline F. How should we understand degrees of belief when we take into account both these phenomena? Can the right kind of theory of the semantics of vagueness help us answer this? Nicholas J.J. Sm…Read more
  •  195
    II—Modelling Higher-Order Vagueness: Columns, Borderlines and Boundaries
    Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 89 (1): 89-108. 2015.
    According to columnar higher-order vagueness, all orders of vagueness coincide: any borderline case is a borderline borderline case, and a third-order borderline case, etc. Bobzien has worked out many details of such a theory and models it with a modal logic closely related to S4. I take up a range of questions about the framework and argue that it is not suitable for modelling the structure of vagueness and higher-order vagueness.
  •  283
    Contingent Identity and Vague Identity
    Analysis 55 (3). 1995.
    Evan's influential argument against vague objects (_Analysis<D>, 1978) has a parallel directed against contingent identity. I argue that Noonan failed in his attempt to accept Evans's argument but save contingent identity by establishing a disanalogy between the two arguments (in The Philosophical Quarterly 1991). Instead, I suggest an alternative way to block the argument against contingent identity and argue that its analogue provides a satisfactory response to Evans's original argument