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143The Philosophical Problem of VaguenessLegal Theory 7 (4): 371-378. 2001.Think of the color spectrum, spread out before you. You can identify the different colors with ease. But if you are asked to indicate the point at which one color ends and the next begins, you are at a loss. “There is no such point,” is a natural thought: One color just shades gradually into the next.
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ADAMS, E. W. "The Logic of Conditionals: An Application of Probability to Deductive Logic" (review)Mind 87 (n/a): 619. 1978.
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HUNTER, G. "Metalogic: An Introduction to the Metatheory of Standard First Order Logic" (review)Mind 83 (n/a): 461. 1974.
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1Sorensen on Vagueness and ContradictionIn Richard Dietz & Sebastiano Moruzzi (eds.), Cuts and clouds: vagueness, its nature, and its logic, Oxford University Press. 2010.
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248The applicability of bayesian convergence-of-opinion theorems to the case of actual scientific inferenceBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 27 (2): 160-161. 1976.
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1MACKIE, J. L. "Truth, Probability and Paradox: Studies in Philosophical Logic" (review)Mind 85 (n/a): 303. 1976.
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134Estimating Conditional Chances and Evaluating CounterfactualsStudia Logica 102 (4): 691-707. 2014.The paper addresses a puzzle about the probabilistic evaluation of counterfactuals, raised by Ernest Adams as a problem for his own theory. I discuss Brian Skyrms’s response to the puzzle. I compare this puzzle with other puzzles about counterfactuals that have arisen more recently. And I attempt to solve the puzzle in a way that is consistent with Adams’s proposal about counterfactuals
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Un argumento de Orayen en favor del condicional materialRevista Latinoamericana de Filosofia 13 (1): 54. 1987.
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234Causation First: Why Causation is Prior to CounterfactualsIn Christoph Hoerl, Teresa McCormack & Sarah R. Beck (eds.), Understanding Counterfactuals, Understanding Causation: Issues in Philosophy and Psychology, Oxford University Press. pp. 230. 2011.We provide an introduction to some of the key issues raised in this volume by considering how individual chapters bear on the prospects of what may be called a ‘counterfactual process view’ of causal reasoning. According to such a view, counterfactual thought is an essential part of the processing involved in making causal judgements, at least in a central range of cases that are critical to a subject’s understanding of what it is for one thing to cause another. We argue that one fruitful way of…Read more
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146The mystery of the missing boundary (review)Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 71 (3). 2005.
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330Possible knowledge of unknown truthSynthese 173 (1). 2010.Fitch’s argument purports to show that for any unknown truth, p , there is an unknowable truth, namely, that p is true and unknown; for a contradiction follows from the assumption that it is possible to know that p is true and unknown. In earlier work I argued that there is a sense in which it is possible to know that p is true and unknown, from a counterfactual perspective; that is, there can be possible, non-actual knowledge, of the actual situation, that in that situation, p is true and unkno…Read more
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268What if ? Questions about conditionalsMind and Language 18 (4). 2003.Section 1 briefly examines three theories of indicative conditionals. The Suppositional Theory is defended, and shown to be incompatible with understanding conditionals in terms of truth conditions. Section 2 discusses the psychological evidence about conditionals reported by Over and Evans (this volume). Section 3 discusses the syntactic grounds offered by Haegeman (this volume) for distinguishing two sorts of conditional.
London, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Language |
| Philosophy of Probability |