•  179
    In this critical notice of Kment's _Modality and Explanatory Reasoning_, we focus on Kment’s arguments for impossible worlds and on a key part of his discussion of the interactions between modality and explanation – the analogy that he draws between scientific and metaphysical explanation.
  •  66
    Deflationism: the best thing since pizza and quite possibly better
    Philosophical Studies 173 (12): 3169-3180. 2016.
    I defend the deflationary theory of truth and reference I have proposed from the objections raised in Vann McGee’s “Thought, Thoughts, and Deflationism,” trying where possible to use arguments that other deflationists might find useful.
  •  32
    Remarks on David Papineau's Thinking about Consciousness1
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 71 (1): 147-147. 2007.
  •  58
    The mysterious flame: Conscious minds in a material world
    Philosophical Review 110 (2): 300-303. 2001.
    As the subtitle indicates, this book is concerned with the relationship between consciousness and the physical world. It recommends a novel and disturbingly pessimistic view about this topic that it calls “naturalistic mysterianism.” The view is naturalistic because it maintains that states of consciousness are reducible to physical properties of the brain. It counts as “mysterian” because it asserts that the physical properties in question are entirely beyond our ken—that they lie well beyond t…Read more
  •  2
    Process Reliabilism and Cartesian Skepticism
    In Keith DeRose & Ted A. Warfield (eds.), Skepticism: a contemporary reader, Oxford University Press. 1999.
  •  33
    There is an important family of semantic notions that we apply to thoughts and to the conceptual constituents of thoughts - as when we say that the thought that the Universe is expanding is true. Thought and World presents a theory of the content of such notions. The theory is largely deflationary in spirit, in the sense that it represents a broad range of semantic notions - including the concept of truth - as being entirely free from substantive metaphysical and empirical presuppositions. At th…Read more
  •  47
    Truth in the realm of thoughts
    Philosophical Studies 96 (1): 87-121. 1999.
  •  54
    This paper has three main concerns. First, it proposes a deflationary theory of the concept of truth, arguing thatthe concept can be explicitly defined in terms of substitutionalquantification. Second, it attempts to describe and explainthe intuitions that have traditionally been thought tofavor correspondence theories of truth over deflationarytheories. And third, it argues that these intuitions areultimately compatible with deflationism, maintaining,among other things, that the relation of sem…Read more
  •  39
    Peacocke on semantic values
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 76 (1). 1998.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  • Introspection (edited book)
    University of Arkansas Press. 2001.
  •  15
    From Assertion to Belief
    ProtoSociology 14 56-66. 2000.
    This paper is concerned with the question of how we arrive at knowledge of the propositional attitudes of other agents. I describe a number of methods, but focus on the method that involves arriving at conclusions about the beliefs of others from information about their assertions and acts of assent. I attempt to give a reasonably full characterization of this method.Among other things, I maintain that when it is properly understood, the method is seen to be altogether independent of simulation.…Read more