•  80
    RÉSUMÉ: La Bible éclaire la distinction kantienne entre les apparences et les choses en soi. Les deux récits bibliques de la création, dans Genèse 1 et 2, offrent différentes analyses ontologiques, et seule la deuxième est, comme les apparences de Kant, relative à la condition humaine. Mais, tandis que l’autre région dont Kant parle est sans caractérisation positive, la Bible décrit amplement le monde tel qu’il est avant l’avènement des hommes et des femmes. La Bible traite de ce domaine du poin…Read more
  •  177
    Berkeley's anti‐abstractionism
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 2 (1). 1994.
  •  128
    Israelite Idol
    Philosophy and Theology 19 (1-2): 57-78. 2007.
    The Bible ridicules idolaters for bowing down to sticks and stones. Since idolaters worship what the sticks and stones stand for, not the sticks and stones themselves, isn’t the biblical position confused? At the basis of the Bible’s consistent refusal to observe the preceding distinction are found the conceptual underpinnings of its critique of idolatry. Men and women alone among creatures are inspired with God’s breath. Men and women alone among creatures, that is, are like God. They alone amo…Read more
  •  58
    Strawson's Hidden Realism
    Journal of Critical Analysis 5 (4): 135-145. 1975.
  •  192
    Book reviews (review)
    with John Bacon, Alan R. White, Lawrence H. Davis, Gershon Weiler, Jeffrey Bub, Ilkka Niiniluoto, Yehuda Melzer, Zeev Levy, S. Biderman, Joseph Raz, Irwin C. Lieb, and Michael Ruse
    Philosophia 5 (3): 319-384. 1975.
  •  50
    Error Theory: Logic, Rhetoric, and Philosophy
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 4 (1). 1990.
  •  70
    On One Leg: The Stability of Monotheism
    Philosophy and Theology 26 (1): 187-206. 2014.
    A potential proselyte asks the great rabbi Hillel to explain the Torah to him while he stands ‘on one leg.’ Hillel responds with, essentially, the Golden Rule. This Talmudic anecdote is invariably read as critical of anyone who wants a Torah for Dummies. I offer a different interpretation. The Torah-based position, theologically speaking, rests on one principle and one principle alone, God. ‘How can an account of the creation as a whole rest on one principle only? Won’t such a structure stand un…Read more
  •  98
    Berkeley and Cognition
    Philosophy 56 (216). 1981.
    In ‘Berkeley and God’, Jonathan Bennett diagnoses Berkeley's intermittent advocacy of the proposition that physical things ‘do sometimes exist when not perceived by any human spirit’ by pinning on him the invalid argument, vitiated by the ambiguity of ‘depend’, from all ideas depend on some spirit or other, via some sensible ideas do not depend on these spirits themselves, to some ideas depend on non-finite spirits
  •  134
    Doctrine and method in the philosophy of P. F. Strawson
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 36 (3): 364-383. 1976.
  • The Substance of Bundles
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 56 (1): 38. 1975.
  •  125
    Cogito
    Modern Schoolman 70 (2): 81-98. 1993.
  •  99
    Myth and Modern Philosophy. By Stephen H. Daniel (review)
    Modern Schoolman 69 (1): 62-64. 1991.
  •  19
    Examining Kant's critical philosophy, this study focusses upon its dialectical constitution and gauging its implications. It attempts to determine the meaning of the critical system more by determining the dialectical and rhetorical influences on Kant by focussing on its manifest reasoning. The volume begins by taking stock of meta-physical and meta-interpretive materials; then goes on to examine the major doctrines of the first Critique; and finally draws wider morals for Kant specifically and …Read more
  • Consciousness and Cognition: From Descartes to Berkeley
    Studia Leibnitiana 14 (n/a): 244. 1982.
    En soulignant la position ressemblante du Dieu dans le système de Descartes et de Berkeley comme sujet de connaissance optimale, c'est à dire ' certain', et le rôle de la notion cartésienne de ‛certitude’ en définissant la nature de la vérité scientifique, on peut nettement transformer la théorie réalistique cartésienne en théorie idéalistique berkelienne. L'élimination une équivoque dans la conception de certitude de Descartes est crucial à cette transformation. Sans cette équivoque, la distinc…Read more
  •  101
    John Locke: An English Transcendentalist?
    Idealistic Studies 23 (2/3): 111-122. 1993.
    Throughout the Critique of Pure Reason, Kant locates his position relative to those of his predecessors and near contemporaries. Save for Spinoza, all the ‘greats’ of the early modern canon put in appearances. But while Kant’s idiom is respectful—Hume is referred to as ‘celebrated’ ; Berkeley is characterised as ‘good’ ; both Locke and Leibniz are called ‘illustrious’ —this ‘language of good will’ recalls Mark Antony’s ‘honourable man’. In fact, the debt Kant acknowledges to the prior toilers is…Read more
  •  83
    The Dawn of Conceptuality: A Kantian Perspective
    Idealistic Studies 9 (3): 187-212. 1979.
    Ever ramifying debate over the correct analysis of linguistic representation unfolds against the backdrop of uncontested acceptance as baseline datum, by those aiming to determine the nature of the cognizing subject’s contact with the world, of language as the vehicle of factual packaging of experience. Given the easy two-way traffic in the contemporary lexicon between “concept” and “ word,” the modern reader’s antennae are not attuned to detect doctrinal parti pris when he encounters the mentio…Read more