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64Scepticism: Epistemic and OntologicalMetaphilosophy 31 (3): 251-261. 2000.It is widely thought that sceptical arguments, if correct, would show that everyday empirical knowledge‐claims are false. Against this, I argue that the very generality of traditional sceptical arguments means that there is no direct incompatibility between everyday empirical claims and sceptical scenarios. Scepticism calls into doubt, not ordinary empirical beliefs, but philosophical attempts to give a deep ontological explanation of such beliefs. G. E. Moore's attempt to refute scepticism (and…Read more
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59Wittgenstein on the Arbitrariness of GrammarReview of Metaphysics 58 (4): 892-893. 2005.Forster’s approach to Wittgenstein exegesis has a number of features which I shall simply note here, but which will certainly be controversial. First, he rejects Wittgenstein’s philosophical quietism as both uninteresting and as misrepresenting Wittgenstein’s own philosophical practice. Hence he is unabashed in attributing theses and doctrines to Wittgenstein. Second, he reconstructs a consistent position from a wide range of texts written between 1929 and 1951; only rather occasionally does he …Read more
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53Review of W. Glenn Kirkconnell, Kierkegaard on Ethics and Religion: From Either/or to Philosophical Fragments (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (5). 2009.
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202Kierkegaard on patience and the temporality of the self: The virtues of a being in timeJournal of Religious Ethics 36 (3): 491-509. 2008.This paper examines Kierkegaard 's discussion of patience in some of his Upbuilding Discourses, and its connection with his understanding of the nature of selfhood as it appears both in the Discourses and in The Sickness unto Death. That understanding stresses that selfhood is not simply given, but is a task to be achieved—although a task that can only be achieved by the self that is formed in the process of undertaking it. For Kierkegaard, an account of the self that recognizes its essential te…Read more
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111Kierkegaard and the limits of the ethicalOxford University Press. 1993.This book is a discussion of some of Kierkegaard's central ideas, showing their relevance to contemporary debates in epistemology, ethics, and the philosophy of religion. Anthony Rudd's aim is not simply to expound Kierkegaard's ideas but to draw on them creatively in order to illuminate questions about the foundations of morality and the nature of personal identity, as discussed by analytical philosophers such as MacIntyre, Parfit, Williams, and Foot. Rudd seeks a way forward from the sterile c…Read more
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97D.Z. PHILLIPS: Religion and the Hermeneutics of Contemplation (review)Faith and Philosophy 21 (2): 270-273. 2004.
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69Skepticism, Sublimity, and TranscendenceInternational Philosophical Quarterly 48 (3): 289-304. 2008.Stanley Cavell has suggested that the deepest roots of skepticism lie in a sense of alienation between the subject and the world, and this has led him to reassess the philosophical importance of the Romantic project of “re-enchanting” the world. One way to pursue this project is by starting from Kant’s reflections on the sublime. I consider Julian Young’s recent discussion of this topic and the Heideggeran pantheism to which it leads him. I conclude that, while there is much insight in Young’s r…Read more
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183Natural doubtsMetaphilosophy 39 (3). 2008.Many philosophers now argue that the doubts of the philosophical sceptic are unnatural ones, in that they are not forced on us by considerations that any reasonable person would have to accept as compelling but only arise if one has already accepted certain controversial theoretical commitments. In this article I defend the naturalness of philosophical scepticism against such criticisms. After defining "global ontological scepticism," I examine the work of a number of anti-sceptical philosophers…Read more
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97Phenomenal judgment and mental causationJournal of Consciousness Studies 7 (6): 53-69. 2000.This paper defends and develops an argument against epiphenomenalism, broadly construed. I argue first for a definition of epiphenomenalism which includes ‘non-reductive’ materialism as well as classical dualistic epiphenomenalism. I then present an argument that if epiphenomenalism were true it would be impossible to know about or even refer to our conscious states -- and therefore impossible even to formulate epiphenomenalism. David Chalmers has defended epiphenomenalism against such arguments…Read more
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1Kierkegaard and the Limits of the EthicalInternational Journal for Philosophy of Religion 37 (1): 57-59. 1993.
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