•  70
  •  119
    The Four-Dimensional World
    Analysis 37 (1): 32-39. 1976.
    This paper defends the view of continuants as 'four-dimensional worms' against an argument of Geach's. This is to the effect that if continuants are four-dimensional worms then their stages either do, or do not, fall under the very general terms satisfied by the continuants themselves (a stage of a man either is, or is not, a man); but that either alternative is untenable. I try to show how the former alternative may be defended by appealing to some of Geach's own ideas about identity; then go o…Read more
  •  218
    Count Nouns and Mass Nouns
    Analysis 38 (4): 167-172. 1978.
    The paper argues that one distinction between concrete count nouns and concrete mass nouns is that geach's derelativization thesis is valid for the former but not valid for the latter. That is, Where 'f' is a concrete count noun 'x is (an) f' means 'for some y, X is the same f as y', But where 'f' is a concrete mass noun this is not so; rather, In this case, 'x is f' is tantamount to 'for some y, X is the f of y'. It is further suggested that abstract nouns are in this respect to be grouped with…Read more
  •  84
    Rigid Designation
    Analysis 39 (4): 174-182. 1979.
  •  241
    On the notion of a sortal concept
    Philosophical Quarterly 28 (110): 58-64. 1978.
  •  51
    Relative identity: a reply to Nicholas Griffin
    Mind 89 (353): 96-98. 1980.
    In the October 1978 issue of Mind, Nicholas Griffin puts forward a criticism of one of my arguments in 'Wiggins on Identity'. Although I would not now wish to defend everything I said in that paper, the argument Griffin attacks still seems to me to be a good one. In what follows, I explain why I think his criticism fails to strike home.
  •  7
    Reply to Leslie Stevenson
    Philosophical Books 23 (1): 7-12. 1982.
    I shall reply to Mr Stevenson's criticisms of my Objects & Identity (1980) in the order in which they occur in his review; mostly this will be a matter of clearing up obvious confusions.
  •  104
  •  8
    Reply Lowe on ships and structures
    Analysis 48 (4): 221-223. 1988.
  •  129
    Vague objects
    Analysis 42 (1): 3-6. 1982.
  •  253
    Perdurance, location and classical mereology
    Analysis 69 (3): 448-452. 2009.
    In his Ted Sider takes care to define the notion of a temporal part and his doctrine of perdurantism using only the temporally indexed notion of parthood – ‘ x is part of y at t’ – rather than the atemporal notion of classical mereology – ‘ x is a part of y’ – in order to forestall accusations of unintelligibility from his opponents. However, as he notes, endurantists do not necessarily reject the classical mereological notion as unintelligible. They allow that it makes sense and applies to atem…Read more
  •  20
    Reflexive Paradoxes, by T. S. Champlin (review)
    Philosophy 64 (250): 568-569. 1989.
  •  45
    The Possibility of Reincarnation
    Religious Studies 26 (4): 483-491. 1990.
    Man has always hoped to survive his bodily death, and it is a central tenet of many religions that such survival is a reality. It has been supposed by many that one form such survival might take is reincarnation in another body. Subscribers to this view include Pythagoras, Plato sometimes, and a large number of Eastern thinkers. Other thinkers have, of course, disputed that reincarnation is a fact, and some have even denied that it is a possibility. But seldom has it been claimed by its opponent…Read more
  •  123
    Identity, constitution and microphysical supervenience
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 99 (3): 273-288. 1999.
    The aim of the paper is to discuss some recent variants of familiar puzzles concerning the relations of parts to wholes put forward by Trenton Merricks and Eric Olson. The argument is put forward that so long as the familiar distinction between 'loose and popular' and 'strict and philosophical' senses of identity claims is accepted the paradoxical conclusions at which Merricks and Olson arrive can be resisted. It is not denied that accepting the distinction between 'loose and popular' and 'stric…Read more
  •  45
    The Concept of Identity
    Philosophical Quarterly 34 (135): 175. 1984.
    In this book, Eli Hirsch focuses on identity through time, first with respect to ordinary bodies, then underlying matter, and eventually persons. These are linked at various points with other aspects of identity, such as the spatial unity of things, the unity of kinds, and the unity of groups. He investigates how our identity concept ordinarily operates in these respects. He also asks why this concept is so cental to our thinking and whether we can justify seeing the world in terms of such a con…Read more
  • CHAMPLIN, T. S. Reflexive Paradoxes (review)
    Philosophy 64 (n/a): 568. 1989.
  •  60
    Reply to Spinks on Temporal Parts
    Analysis 47 (4): 187-188. 1987.
  •  3
    The Concept of Identity, by Eli Hirsch (review)
    Philosophical Quarterly 34 (135): 175-176. 1984.
  •  83
    Against Strong Pluralism
    Philosophia 43 (4): 1081-1087. 2015.
    Strong pluralists hold that not even permanent material coincidence is enough for identity. Strong pluralism entails the possibility of purely material objects -- even if not coincident -- alike in all general respects, categorial and dispositional, relational and non-relational, past, present and future, at the microphysical level, but differing in some general modal, counterfactual or dispositional repscts at the macrophysical level. It is objectionable because it thus deprives us of the expla…Read more
  •  7
    Wiggins' Second Thoughts on Identity (review)
    Philosophical Quarterly 31 (24): 260-268. 1981.
    Critical study of David Wiggins's Sameness and Substance (1980)
  •  95
  •  7
    Review: Booknotes (review)
    Philosophy 57 (219). 1982.
  •  30
    Animalism versus Lockeanism: Reply to Mackie
    Philosophical Quarterly 51 (202): 83-90. 2001.
    I respond to criticisms by David Mackie of my previous paper on animalism and Lockeanism. I argue that the ‘transplant intuition’, that a person goes where his brain (or cerebrum) goes, is compatible both with animalism and Lockeanism. I give three arguments for this conclusion, two of them developing lines of thought in Parfit's work. However, I accept that animalism and Lockeanism are incompatible, and I go on to consider the difficulties for Lockeanism that this raises. The principal difficu…Read more