•  697
    ISydney Shoemaker: Self, Body, and Coincidence
    Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 73 (1): 287-306. 1999.
    A major objection to the view that the relation of persons to human animals is coincidence rather than identity is that on this view the human animal will share the coincident person's physical properties, and so should (contrary to the view) share its mental properties. But while the same physical predicates are true of the person and the human animal, the difference in the persistence conditions of these entities implies that there will be a difference in the properties ascribed by these predi…Read more
  •  1220
    On the inevitability of freedom (from the compatibilist point of view)
    American Philosophical Quarterly 23 (4): 393-400. 1986.
    This paper argues that ability to do otherwise (in the compatibilist sense) at the moment of initiation of action is a necessary condition of being able to act at all. If the argument is correct, it shows that Harry Frankfurt never provided a genuine counterexample to the 'principles of alternative possibilities' in his 1969 paper ‘Alternate Possibilities and Moral Responsibility’. The paper was written without knowledge of Frankfurt's paper.