• Conceptuality: An Essay in Retrieval
    Société Française de Philosophie, Bulletin 70 (4): 383. 1979.
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    A stratified bundle theory
    Synthese 42 (3). 1979.
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    How Philosophers See 'Red'
    Grazer Philosophische Studien 4 (1): 43-64. 1977.
    To what extent is conceptual analysis under strict semantic control? In an effort to show that conceptual structure transcends the linguistic dimension proper, the tensions within, and between, several current treatments of the concept red are revealed and explored. It is argued that certain extra-semantic factors — factors, broadly speaking, which concern the manner in which a concept applier interacts with the world as an extralinguistic agent - provide a backdrop against which conceptual anal…Read more
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    Transcendental Idealism: The Dialectical Dimension
    Dialectica 45 (1): 31-45. 1991.
    SummaryLeft wing interpreters of Kant's transcendental idealism argue that the doctrine must be excised in order to disclose the viable philosophical content of the first Critique. For right wing interpreters, this leaves a Hamlet without the prince. I chart and defend a middle path. Transcendental idealism, while essential to Kant's position, renders that position philosophically indefensible. Constant misinterpretation of the doctrine results from a failure to appreciate the inter‐theoretic re…Read more
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    Euthyphro
    Teaching Philosophy 15 (1): 33-49. 1992.
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    Semantic Determinacy and Ontology
    Idealistic Studies 7 (2): 109-131. 1977.
    The notion of individuation has both a semantic and an ontological face. More exactly, the claim can be defended that individuation has a proprietary linguistic or conceptual aspect as distinct from an ontological one. Ontologists such as W. V. Quine would credit neither the possibility of such a divergence nor the intelligibility of its proposal. The ontology of a language, for Quine, is inseparable from its individuative resources, mechanisms such as identity, pluralization, pronouns, and so f…Read more
  •  107
    Transcendental Idealism and the End of Philosophy
    Metaphilosophy 24 (1-2): 97-112. 1993.
    The first "Critique", Kant states inaugurates a perfectly new science'. But this transcendental philosophy', for dealing in possibilities, not actualities, does not qualify as philosophy in the traditional sense. What Kant dubs transcendental idealism' "is" however an (ontological) doctrine about things. Kant's doctrinal stand is thus inconsistent with his description of transcendental enquiry. Since transcendental idealism gets its meaning from the contrast with Cartesian realism, it follows th…Read more
  •  102
    Cartesian Uncertainty
    Grazer Philosophische Studien 27 (1): 101-124. 1986.
    For placing the contrast of certainty and uncertainty at the philosophical center, Descartes is charged with Michael Dummett with mistakenly subordinating the study of language and meaning to epistemology. But Dummett's knowledge-theoretic reading of the certainty/uncertainty duality is as erroneous as the tradition it inherits is long. The Cartesian demand for certainty and critique of uncertainty in mature writings like the Meditations has a definite semantic character. Cartesian uncertainty, …Read more
  •  79
    Of mice and men: God and the canadian supreme court
    Ratio Juris 21 (1): 107-124. 2008.
    In a recent 5‐to‐4 decision, the Supreme Court of Canada denied to Harvard University a patent on a genetically modified mouse. In their reasoning, the majority Justices, concerned obviously about the implications of granting the patent for the human case, argue that higher organisms (mammals) are not “compositions of matter” in the sense intended by the Canadian Patent Act. But if a mouse is not a composition of matter, what—indeed, what on earth—is it? As the minority Justices complain, the ma…Read more
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    The structure of cartesian scepticism
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 21 (3): 343-357. 1983.
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    Causation, Cognition, and Historical Typology
    Dialectica 34 (3): 211-227. 1980.
    SummaryBecause it is not generally appreciated that Hume's analysis of the causal tie as radically contingent or ‘irrational’ is bound up with his specialised theory of cognition, its historical position is widely misconceived. Even a rationalist like Spinoza would agree that if, as Hume maintains, the causal tie holds between items each of which is‘ adequately’ grasped independently of the other, i.e. between what Spinoza calls ‘substances’, then the tie is indeed irrational. Also, Kant does no…Read more
  •  109
    Mind and body: Two real distinctions
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 22 (3): 347-359. 1984.
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    Cogitations
    Review of Metaphysics 41 (2): 397-398. 1987.
    Though, in view of Descartes' challenge to the epistemological credentials of "reason" early in the Meditations, one expects him to resist the claim that the professedly invulnerable cogito argument works through the suppressed premise "Everything that thinks, exists," interpreters have been hard-pressed to convert comprendre here into pardonner. Loath to convict Descartes of confusing a psychological point about inferential process with a logical one about the conditions for validity, many are …Read more
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    Invitation to a beheading: The career of philosophy
    Philosophia 28 (1-4): 39-66. 2001.
    Registrants for the academic study of philosophy, expecting an encounter with special cognitive products, regal truths, are soon enough disabused. Philosophy, its supposedly special access to the structure of things exploded, is relegated to sundry tasks of intellectual hygiene. I track down the source of the unrealistic view, anatomising what has a strong claim to be regarded as the regal enterprise’s inau¬gural reasoning—in Plato. When professionals consider the successor activity that is call…Read more
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    The "Meditations"
    Modern Schoolman 68 (4): 305-319. 1991.