•  279
    Causation: Reductionism versus realism
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 50 (n/a): 215-236. 1990.
  •  56
    The Deconstruction of Time
    Review of Metaphysics 45 (3): 645-646. 1992.
    A number of philosophers have maintained that traditional ways of thinking about time involve metaphysical presuppositions. Jacques Derrida, however, has gone further, and has argued that the very concept of time is itself essentially metaphysical, and thus that there is no possibility of a nonmetaphysical conception of time. It is this latter claim that David Wood wishes to challenge. Thus, while he agrees that traditional conceptions of time have involved metaphysical presuppositions, he conte…Read more
  •  340
    Farewell to McTaggart’s Argument?
    Philosophia 38 (2): 243-255. 2010.
    Philosophers have responded to McTaggart’s famous argument for the unreality of time in a variety of ways. Some of those responses are not easy to evaluate, since they involve, for example, sometimes murky questions concerning whether a certain infinite regress is or is not vicious. In this paper I set out a response that has not, I think, been advanced by any other author, and which, if successful, is absolutely clear-cut. The basic idea is simply that a tensed approach to time can avoid McTagg…Read more
  •  78
    Causes and Coincidences
    Philosophical Review 103 (3): 546. 1994.