•  53
    Interpreting concatenation and concatenates
    Philosophical Issues 16 (1). 2006.
    This paper presents a slightly modified version of the compositional semantics proposed in Events and Semantic Architecture (OUP 2005). Some readers may find this shorter version, which ignores issues about vagueness and causal constructions, easier to digest. The emphasis is on the treatments of plurality and quantification, and I assume at least some familiarity with more standard approaches.
  •  87
    Think of the children
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 86 (4). 2008.
    Often, the deepest disagreements are about starting points, and which considerations are relevant.
  •  201
    I argue that linguistic meanings are instructions to build monadic concepts that lie between lexicalizable concepts and truth-evaluable judgments. In acquiring words, humans use concepts of various adicities to introduce concepts that can be fetched and systematically combined via certain conjunctive operations, which require monadic inputs. These concepts do not have Tarskian satisfaction conditions. But they provide bases for refinements and elaborations that can yield truth-evaluable judgment…Read more
  •  174
    Mental causation for dualists
    Mind and Language 9 (3): 336-366. 1994.
    The philosophical problem of mental causation concerns a clash between commonsense and scientific views about the causation of human behaviour. On the one hand, commonsense suggests that our actions are caused by our mental states—our thoughts, intentions, beliefs and so on. On the other hand, neuroscience assumes that all bodily movements are caused by neurochemical events. It is implausible to suppose that our actions are causally overdetermined in the same way that the ringing of a bell may b…Read more
  •  21
    Quantification and Second-Order Quantification
    Philosophical Perspectives 17 (1): 259--298. 2003.
  •  139
    Brass tacks in linguistic theory: Innate grammatical principles
    with Stephen Grain and Andrea Gualmini
    In Peter Carruthers, Stephen Laurence & Stephen P. Stich (eds.), The Innate Mind: Structure and Contents, Oxford University Press Usa. pp. 1--175. 2005.
    In the normal course of events, children manifest linguistic competence equivalent to that of adults in just a few years. Children can produce and understand novel sentences, they can judge that certain strings of words are true or false, and so on. Yet experience appears to dramatically underdetermine the com- petence children so rapidly achieve, even given optimistic assumptions about children’s nonlinguistic capacities to extract information and form generalizations on the basis of statistica…Read more
  •  35
    Natural number concepts: No derivation without formalization
    with Jeffrey Lidz
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 31 (6): 666-667. 2008.
    The conceptual building blocks suggested by developmental psychologists may yet play a role in how the human learner arrives at an understanding of natural number. The proposal of Rips et al. faces a challenge, yet to be met, faced by all developmental proposals: to describe the logical space in which learners ever acquire new concepts
  •  35
    Lot 2 (review)
    Journal of Philosophy 107 (12): 653-658. 2010.
  •  101
    Executing the second best option
    Analysis 54 (4): 201-207. 1994.
  •  50
    A “should” too many
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (1): 26-27. 1994.
  •  83
    Systematicity via Monadicity
    Croatian Journal of Philosophy 7 (3): 343-374. 2007.
    Words indicate concepts, which have various adicities. But words do not, in general, inherit the adicities of the indicated concepts. Lots of evidence suggests that when a concept is lexicalized, it is linked to an analytically related monadic concept that can be conjoined with others. For example, the dyadic concept CHASE(_,_) might be linked to CHASE(_), a concept that applies to certain events. Drawing on a wide range of extant work, and familiar facts, I argue that the (open class) lexical i…Read more