•  704
    Impossible Worlds
    Analysis 44 (3). 1984.
  •  570
    Identity Facts
    Philosophical Topics 30 (1): 237-267. 2002.
  •  1132
    Illogical Belief
    Philosophical Perspectives 3 243-285. 1989.
    A sequel to the author’s book /Frege’s Puzzle/ (1986).
  •  609
    Is de re Belief Reducible to de dicto?
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 27 (sup1): 85-110. 1997.
  •  834
    Generality
    Philosophical Studies 161 (3): 471-481. 2012.
    A distinction is drawn among predicates, open sentences (or open formulas), and general terms, including general-term phrases. Attaching a copula, perhaps together with an article, to a general term yields a predicate. Predicates can also be obtained through lambda-abstraction on an open sentence. The issue of designation and semantic content for each type of general expression is investigated. It is argued that the designatum of a general term is a universal, e.g., a kind, whereas the designatu…Read more
  •  667
    How Not to Become a Millian Heir
    Philosophical Studies 62 (2). 1991.
  •  1133
    Demonstrating and Necessity
    Philosophical Review 111 (4): 497-537. 2002.
    My title is meant to suggest a continuation of the sort of philosophical investigation into the nature of language and modality undertaken in Rudolf Carnap’s Meaning and Necessity and Saul Kripke’s Naming and Necessity. My topic belongs in a class with meaning and naming. It is demonstratives—that is, expressions like ‘that darn cat’ or the pronoun ‘he’ used deictically. A few philosophers deserve particular credit for advancing our understanding of demonstratives and other indexical words. Thou…Read more
  •  775
    There is an inconsistency among claims made (or apparently made) in separate articles by Alonzo Church concerning Frege's distinction between sense and denotation taken together with plausible assertions by Frege concerning his notion of ungerade Sinn-i.e., the sense that an expression allegedly takes on in positions in which it has ungerade Bedeutung, denoting its own customary sense. As with any inconsistency, the difficulty can be avoided by relinquishing one of the joint assumptions from whi…Read more
  •  735
  •  893
    Are General Terms Rigid?
    Linguistics and Philosophy 28 (1). 2004.
    On Kripke’s intended definition, a term designates an object x rigidly if the term designates x with respect to every possible world in which x exists and does not designate anything else with respect to worlds in which x does not exist. Kripke evidently holds in Naming and Necessity, hereafter N&N (pp. 117–144, passim, and especially at 134, 139–140), that certain general terms – including natural-kind terms like ‘‘water’’ and ‘‘tiger’’, phenomenon terms like ‘‘heat’’ and ‘‘hot’’, and color ter…Read more
  •  630
    About Aboutness
    European Journal of Analytic Philosophy 3 (2): 59-76. 2007.
    A Russellian notion of what it is for a proposition to be “directly about” something in particular is defined. Various strong and weak, and mediate and immediate, Russellian notions of general aboutness are then defined in terms of Russellian direct aboutness. In particular, a proposition is about something iff the proposition is either directly, or strongly indirectly, about that thing. A competing Russellian account, due to Kaplan, is criticized through a distinction between knowledge by descr…Read more
  •  941
    We defend hylomorphism against Maegan Fairchild’s purported proof of its inconsistency. We provide a deduction of a contradiction from SH+, which is the combination of “simple hylomorphism” and an innocuous premise. We show that the deduction, reminiscent of Russell’s Paradox, is proof-theoretically valid in classical higher-order logic and invokes an impredicatively defined property. We provide a proof that SH+ is nevertheless consistent in a free higher-order logic. It is shown that the unrest…Read more
  •  1277
    Reflexivity
    Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 27 (3): 401-429. 1986.
  •  1172
    Modal Paradox: Parts and Counterparts, Points and Counterpoints
    Midwest Studies in Philosophy 11 (1): 75-120. 1986.
  •  710
    Analyticity and Apriority
    Philosophical Perspectives 7 125-133. 1993.
  •  635
    Pronouns as Variables
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 72 (3). 2006.
    University of California, Santa Barbara.