•  94
    David Lewis presented a celebrated argument for the identity theory of mind. His argument has provided the model for the program of analytic functionalism. He argues from two premises, that mental states are analytically tied to their causal roles and that, contingently, there is never a need to explain any physical change by going outside the realm of the physical, to the conclusion that mental states are physical. I show that his argument is mistaken and that it trades on a crucial ambiguity i…Read more
  •  126
    Belief De Re, Knowing Who, and Singular Thought
    Journal of Philosophy 107 (6): 293-310. 2010.
  •  66
    Time Travel for Endurantists
    American Philosophical Quarterly 52 (4): 357-364. 2015.
    Famously, David Lewis argued that we can avoid the apparent paradoxes of time travel by introducing a notion of personal time, which by and large follows the causal flow of the time traveler's life history. This paper argues that a related approach can be adapted for use by three-dimensionalists in response to Ted Sider's claim that three-dimensionalism is inconsistent with time travel. In contrast to Lewis (and others who follow him on this point), however, this paper argues that the order of e…Read more
  •  149
    Implicit ontological commitment
    Philosophical Studies 141 (1). 2008.
    Quine’s general approach is to treat ontology as a matter of what a theory says there is. This turns ontology into a question of which existential statements are consequences of that theory. This approach is contrasted favourably with the view that takes ontological commitment as a relation to things. However within the broadly Quinean approach we can distinguish different accounts, differing as to the nature of the consequence relation best suited for determining those consequences. It is sugge…Read more
  •  96
    S.J. Gould's Last Words
    Metascience 12 (2): 214-216. 2003.