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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
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318What God Could Have MadeSouthern Journal of Philosophy 43 (3): 355-376. 2005.Plantinga grants that there are possible worlds with freedom and no moral evil, but he argues that it is possible that although God is omnipotent, it is not within God’s power to actualize a world containing freedom and no moral evil. Plantinga believes that the atheologian assumes that it is necessary that it is within an omnipotent God’s power to actualize these better worlds, but in fact, Plantinga argues, this is demonstrably not the case. Since so many philosophers have regarded Plantinga’s…Read more
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247Necessity, Apriority, and True Identity StatementsErkenntnis 40 (2). 1994.The thesis that the necessary and the a priori are extensionally equivalent consists of two independent claims: 1) All a priori truths are necessary and 2) all necessary truths are a priori. In Naming and Necessity1 Saul A. Kripke gives examples of necessary but a posteriori truths, so he disagrees with the second leg of the thesis.2 His examples are of two types; on the one hand statements involving essential properties and on the other hand true identity statements. My concern will be with exa…Read more
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99Beyond Rigidity: The Unfinished Semantic Agenda of Naming and Necessity, by Scott SoamesDisputatio (18): 185-191. 2005.n Naming and Necessity Saul Kripke criticized descriptivist theories of proper names and suggested a ‘better picture’ as a replacement. But while the ‘better picture’ that Kripke provided was very interesting and stimulating, it was little more than a sketch of a theory that needed much work and refinement. While Kripke argued that proper names are not synonymous with definite descriptions or clusters of definite descriptions, he was silent on what the semantic contents of names might be. Furthe…Read more
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153Partial Propositions and Cognitive ContentJournal of Philosophical Research 21 117-128. 1996.Recently there has been a surge of new Fregeans who claim that the direct designation theory, as understood by contemporary Russellians, does not, and cannot, account for the different cognitive significance of statements containing different but codesignative names or indexicals. Instead, they say we must use a fine grained notion of propositions; one which builds a mode of presentation into proposition in addition to including in them the object referred to by the name or indexical in the sent…Read more
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1427Moral twin-earth and semantic moral realismErkenntnis 62 (3): 353-378. 2005.Mark Timmons and Terry Horgan have argued that the new moral realism, which rests on the causal theory of reference, is untenable. While I do agree that the new moral realism is untenable, I do not think that Timmons and Horgan have succeeded in showing that it is. I will lay out the case for new moral realism and Horgan and Timmons’ argument against it, and then argue that their argument fails. Further, I will discuss Boyd’s semantic theory as well as attempts to improve upon it, raise serious …Read more
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110Discovering IdentitySouthwest Philosophy Review 17 (2): 43-57. 2001.Driven by the intuition that the propositions expressed by a=a and a=b, where ‘a’ and ‘b’ are codesignative names, differ in cognitive value, philosophers constructing theories of beliefs and belief attributions have been attracted to elements from both Frege’s and Russell’s theories. This, I will argue, has had the consequence that some of the theories entail that it is a necessary condition for making the astronomical discovery that Hesperus is Phosphorus that we make a mental discovery about …Read more
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1884Regresses, Sufficient Reasons, and Cosmological ArgumentsJournal of Philosophical Research 24 285-304. 1999.Most of the historically salient versions of the Cosmological Argument rest on two assumptions. The first assumption is that some contingeney (i.e., contingent fact) is such that a necessity is required to explain it. Against that assumption we will argue that necessities alone cannot explain any contingency and, furthermore, that it is impossible to explain the totality of contingencies at all.The second assumption is the Principle of Sufficient Reason. Against the Principle of Sufficient Reaso…Read more
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Yorick A. Wilks, Brian M. Slater, and Louise M. Guthrie, Electric Words: Dictionaries, Computers and MeaningsMinds and Machines 7 312-315. 1997.
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3Names and BeliefsDissertation, The University of Nebraska - Lincoln. 1988.The general topic of this work is the information value of declarative sentences containing proper names. I begin by accepting the direct designation theory of names. The theory, however, does not appear to be able to account for the difference in information value between sentences like 'Hesperus is Phosphorus' and 'Hesperus is Hesperus'. In order to explain this difference I develop an account of belief that takes a novel approach to the contents of beliefs of propositions expressed by such se…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 |