•  323
    The ‘Must’ and the ‘Heptahedron’
    Theoria: Revista de Teoría, Historia y Fundamentos de la Ciencia 18 (2): 199-206. 2003.
    I offer some brief remarks in reply to comments and criticisms of my earlier work on logical consequence and logical constants. I concentrate on criticisms, especially García-Carpintero’s charge that myviews make no room for modal intuitions about logical consequence, and Sher’s attempted rebuttal of my critique of her theory of logical constants. I show that García-Carpintero’s charge is based on misunderstandings, and that Sher’s attempted rebuttal actually reveals new problems for her theory.
  •  108
    On quoting the empty expression
    Philosophical Studies 148 (3). 2010.
    Roy Sorensen has argued that a certain technical use of quotation marks to name the empty string supports a revised version of Davidson’s theory of quotation. I point out that Sorensen’s considerations provide no support for Davidson’s original theory, and I show that at best they support the revised Davidsonian theory only to the same extent that they support a simpler revised version of a Tarskian theory.
  •  87
    Alfred Tarski
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2008.
  •  45
    Kripke on Color Words and the Primary-Secondary Quality Distinction
    In Alan Berger (ed.), Saul Kripke, Cambridge University Press. pp. 290-323. 2010.
    An exposition of Kripke's unpublished critique of dispositionalism about color, followed by a review of some recent defenses of dispositionalism and a sketch of some objections that could be made to these defenses from a broadly Kripkean perspective.
  •  172
    Tarski on Logical Consequence
    Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 37 (1): 125-151. 1996.
    This paper examines from a historical perspective Tarski's 1936 essay, "On the concept of logical consequence." I focus on two main aims. The primary aim is to show how Tarski's definition of logical consequence satisfies two desiderata he himself sets forth for it: (1) it must declare logically correct certain formalizations of the -rule and (2) it must allow for variation of the individual domain in the test for logical consequence. My arguments provide a refutation of some interpreters of Tar…Read more
  •  112
    In reply to Arif Ahmed, I argue that the apparatus of essentiality and qualified and unqualified possibilist identifications, developed in my paper 'Rigidity and Essentiality', can be used to provide a flawless reconstruction of several Kripkean ideas about the semantics of typical natural kind predicates, the essence of natural kinds, the contingency of usual descriptive identifications, and the arguments against psychophysical identity theories
  •  139
    Report of an unsuccessful search for nonconceptual content
    Philosophical Issues 9 369-379. 1998.
    In his “What Might Nonconceptual Content Be?”, Robert Stalnaker finds no good argument for the claim that certain intuitive differences between perception and belief must be explained by a distinction between the kinds of content of perception states (which would have nonconceptual content) and belief states (which would have conceptual content). I object to Stalnaker that he does not examine arguments for this claim actually produced by its defenders. But I reach a conclusion of the same kind a…Read more
  •  164
    Kripke. Names, Necessity, and Identity
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 76 (1): 219-222. 2008.