•  45
    Cartesian Probability and Cognitive Structure
    Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 36 (4). 1982.
  •  38
  •  20
    The Structure of Cartesian Scepticism
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 21 (3): 343-357. 2010.
  •  135
    Kant’s ‘Critical’ Rationalism: The Dialectical Dimension
    Idealistic Studies 22 (2): 107-121. 1992.
    Matter, in Aristotle’s Metaphysics, plays a prototypical version of a rôle that recurs, refracted through the domestic preoccupations of each age, in metaphysical analyses of the constitution of the real. After identifying the rôle, I shall trace a developmental arc of philosophical treatment from Aristotle through the Cartesian period to Kant. The mature Kantian view of the rôle—the ‘critical’ view—is, I maintain, a reversion to the Aristotelian position. It is not however a simple reversion. I…Read more
  •  90
    Tractatus: Pluralism or monism?
    Mind 89 (353): 17-36. 1980.
  •  129
    Hume on Modes
    Hume Studies 3 (1): 32-50. 1977.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:32. HUME ON MODES As thorough a critic as Norman Kemp Smith states in his investigation of the Treatise that "Hume's treatment of... the complex ideas of modes... need not detain us." Whatever is interesting in this brief treatment, Smith suggests, rests on remarkable features of Humean doctrine, elsewhere expounded at length. This is true, I would agree, as a descriptive comment to the following degree. The category of modes is offi…Read more
  •  102
    The First Professor of Biblical Philosophy
    Sophia 52 (3): 503-519. 2013.
    The notion of a particular is what makes the Bible (the reference is to the Hebrew Scriptures) an original position in philosophy. (Particulars are self-contained spatio-temporal entities, and hence, though present in the system that is nature, are not essentially parts of it.) The early chapters of Genesis develop a comprehensive (anti-pagan) conceptualization of reality that gives particularity its due. Whether particularity can be secured without a fully extra-natural anchorage (i.e., without…Read more
  •  108
    Spinoza à la mode: A defence of Spinozistic anti-pluralism
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 75 (1). 1997.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  85
    O God, O Montreal!
    Philo 17 (1): 23-43. 2014.
    In the book A Secular Age, Charles Taylor argues that: (1) modern secularism carries in it more than a trace residue of the explicitly religious way of thinking that it supersedes, and (2) the secular ensemble would not survive if the residue were filtered out. Modern secularism is not, in short, exclusively humanistic. Many who profess exclusive humanism, even perhaps the majority, are therefore—according to Taylor—exclusive humanists in name alone. My position is that Judeo-Christianity, in it…Read more
  •  69
    Cartesian Certainty: Toward the Categorial Core
    Idealistic Studies 15 (3): 219-248. 1985.
    Whence the Cartesian’s advantage over competing world investigators? Descartes’s answer is that those of his persuasion do not proceed by “resting [their] reasons on any other principle than the infinite perfections of God”. The claim’s considerable opacity does not prevent it from letting this much light filter through: only Cartesian scientists operate on the right metaphysical basis.