•  134
    Modal supereminence and modal realism
    Theoria 58 (2-3): 99-115. 1992.
    Colin McGinn proposes that acceptance of the supervenience of the modal on the actual is the natural form of expression of a non-objectual realism about modality. Here, some of the difficulties that arise in applying theses of supervenience to the modal-actual case are discussed. It is then argued: 1)that the truth of many such theses is determined on uncontroversial modal logical and conceptual grounds, and 2) that this and other independent considerations render it highly implausible that the …Read more
  •  206
    Genuine modal realism limited
    with Joseph Melia
    Mind 112 (445): 83-86. 2003.
  •  131
    Arithmaetical platonism: Reliability and judgement-dependence
    Philosophical Studies 95 (3): 277-310. 1999.
  •  391
    A genuine realist theory of advanced modalizing
    Mind 108 (430): 217-239. 1999.
    The principle of modal ubiquity - that every truth is necessary or contingent - and the validity of possibility introduction, are principles that any modal theory suffers for failing to accommodate. Advanced modal claims are modal claims about entities other than spatiotemporally unified individuals (perhaps, then, spatiotemporally disunified individuals, sets, numbers, properties, propositions and events). I show that genuine modal realism, as it has thus far been explicitly developed, and in s…Read more
  •  249
    An inconvenient modal truth
    Analysis 74 (4): 575-577. 2014.
    There is a de re modal truth that proves inconvenient for the canonical Lewisian theory of modality. For this truth requires on that theory, the existence of things (counterparts) that exist in distinct worlds but are also spatiotemporally related.
  •  295
    Agnosticism about other worlds: A new antirealist programme in modality
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 69 (3): 660-685. 2004.
    The modal antirealist, as presented here, aims to secure at least some of the benefits associated with talking in genuine modal realist terms while avoiding commitment to a plurality of Lewisian (or ersatz) worlds. The antirealist stance of agnosticism about other worlds combines acceptance of Lewis's account of what world-talk means with refusal to assert, or believe in, the existence of other worlds. Agnosticism about other worlds does not entail a comprehensive agnosticism about modality, but…Read more