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144On the prohibitive cost of indiscernible concrete possible worldsAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 72 (3). 1994.
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284Coincidence and formAristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 82 (1): 119-137. 2008.I compare a Lewisian defence of monism with Kit Fine's defence of pluralism. I argue that the Lewisian defence is, at present, the clearer in its explanatory intent and ontological commitments. I challenge Fine to explain more fully the nature of the entities that he postulates and the relationship between continuous material objects and the parts of those rigid embodiments in terms of which he proposes to explain crucial, modal and sortal, features of those objects.
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200Belief in Absolute NecessityPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 87 (2): 358-391. 2012.We outline a theory of the cognitive role of belief in absolute necessity that is normative and intended to be metaphysically neutral. We take this theory to be unique in scope since it addresses simultaneously the questions of how such belief is (properly) acquired and of how it is (properly) manifest. The acquisition and manifestation conditions for belief in absolute necessity are given univocally, in terms of complex higher-order attitudes involving two distinct kinds of supposition (A-suppo…Read more
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249An inconvenient modal truthAnalysis 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.
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295Agnosticism about other worlds: A new antirealist programme in modalityPhilosophy 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
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391A genuine realist theory of advanced modalizingMind 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
University of Glasgow
PhD, 1990
Dublin, Dublin, Ireland
Areas of Specialization
| Metaphysics and Epistemology |
| Science, Logic, and Mathematics |
Areas of Interest
| Metaphysics and Epistemology |
| Science, Logic, and Mathematics |