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Alvin I. Goldman, Liaisons: Philosophy Meets the Cognitive and Social Sciences (review)Minds and Machines 7 306-312. 1997.
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15Contemporary analytic and linguistic philosophies (edited book)Prometheus Books. 2000.This new, second edition of the popular college textbook offers the beginning philosophy student a comprehensive introduction to several aspects of one of the most influential schools of thought in the twentieth century. Professor Klemke begins by pointing out the distinctions among the various types of analytic and linguistic philosophies, while emphasising that they all arose as a response to the formerly predominant school of absolute idealism. After a prologue section containing a representa…Read more
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427Plantinga and the Problem of EvilThe Proceedings of the Twenty-First World Congress of Philosophy 8 109-113. 2006.The logical problem of evil centers on the apparent inconsistency of the following two propositions: God is omnipotent, omniscient, and wholly good, and There is evil in the world. This is the problem that Alvin Plantinga takes to task in his celebrated response to the problem of evil. Plantinga denies that and are inconsistent, arguing that J.L. Mackie's principle - that there are no limits to what an omnipotent thing can do - is false. We challenge Plantinga, and defend Mackie's view
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861Justification and Ways of BelievingDisputatio 1 (12). 2002.One of the issues that has been hotly discussed in connection with the direct designation theory is whether or not coreferential names can be substituted salva veritate in epistemic contexts. Some direct designation theorists believe that they can be so substituted. Some direct designation theorists and all Fregeans and neo-Fregeans believe that they cannot be so substituted. Fregeans of various stripes have used their intuition against free substitution to argue against the direct designation t…Read more
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424Conceivability and defeasible modal justificationPhilosophical Studies 122 (3): 279-304. 2005.This paper advances the thesis that we can justifiably believe philosophically interesting possibility statements. The first part of the paper critically discusses van Inwagens skeptical arguments while at the same time laying some of the foundation for a positive view. The second part of the paper advances a view of conceivability in terms of imaginability, where imaginging can be propositional, pictorial, or a combination of the two, and argues that conceivability can, and often does, provide …Read more
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236The contingent a priori: Kripke's two types of examplesAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 69 (2). 1991.In Naming and Necessity' Saul A. Kripke gives two types of examples of contingent truths knowable a priori. So he disagrees with the first leg of the thesis. As we will see later, his examples depend on the direct designation theory of names. While there have been attempts to provide examples of the contingent a priori that do not depend on that theory, most of those examples should be viewed as expansions, or modifications, of Kripke's examples. Philip Kitcher, for example, gives an interesting…Read more
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923Moral Twin Earth, Intuitions, and Kind TermsCroatian Journal of Philosophy 14 (1): 91-110. 2014.Horgan and Timmons, with their Moral Twin Earth arguments, argue that the new moral realism falls prey to either objectionable relativism or referential indeterminacy. The Moral Twin Earth thought experiment on which the arguments are based relies in crucial ways on the use of intuitions. First, it builds on Putnam’s well-known Twin Earth example and the conclusions drawn from that about the meaning of kind names. Further, it relies on the intuition that were Earthers and Twin Earthers to meet, …Read more
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145Frege and object dependent propositionsDialectica 56 (4). 2002.Gareth Evans and John McDowell have challenged the traditional reading of Frege according to which Frege accepted propositions that are not object dependent, i.e., propositions that can exist even though the proper names that occur in the sentences that express them do not refer. A consequence of the Evans‐McDowell interpretation of Frege is that if someone hallucinates that there is an oasis in front of her, then there is no thought of an oasis but only an illusion of a thought. No reference en…Read more
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62Beginning metaphysics: an introductory text with readings (edited book)Blackwell. 1991.This flexible textbook is both an introduction and a reader in metaphysics combining original discussion with selections from primary sources.
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80Philosophy of language and webs of informationRoutledge. 2013.Introduction and overview -- Reference -- Propositions: structure and objects -- Reporting attitudes -- Singular propositions and acquaintance -- Beliefs and belief reports -- Empty names -- Attitude contexts: beliefs and justification.
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94Multiple Realizability, Physical Constraints, and PossibilitiesSouthwest Philosophy Review 27 (2): 53-56. 2011.
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213Contra collective epistemic agencySouthwest Philosophy Review 20 (2): 163-166. 2004.In a couple of recent papers Deborah Tollefsen has argued that groups should be viewed as having some of the intentional and epistemic properties as do individuals. In “Organizations as True Believers” she argues that corporations really do have intentional states.1 In “Collective Epistemic Agency”2 she continues her development of group agency and she now argues that collectives can be genuine knowers. The target of her arguments is, naturally, the wide spread view that “knowers are individuals…Read more
Ames, Iowa, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Philosophy of Language |
| M&E, Misc |
Areas of Interest
2 more
| Epistemology |
| Metaphysics |
| Philosophy of Language |
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Metaphysics and Epistemology |
| M&E, Misc |
| Meta-Ethics |