• Logic and Philosophy: A Modern Introduction
    with Howard Kahane and Frank Boardman
    Hackett Publishing Company. 2021.
    A comprehensive introduction to formal logic, _Logic and Philosophy: A Modern Introduction_ is a rigorous yet accessible text, appropriate for students encountering the subject for the first time. Abundant, carefully crafted exercise sets accompanied by a clear, engaging exposition build to an exploration of sentential logic, first-order predicate logic, the theory of descriptions, identity, relations, set theory, modal logic, and Aristotelian logic. And as its title suggests, _Logic and Philoso…Read more
  • John Sutton: Philosophy and memory
    Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 83 (2): 220-223. 2001.
  •  69
    Is everything a class?
    with Tom Foster
    Philosophical Studies 32 (4). 1977.
  •  30
    Logic and philosophy: a modern introduction
    Hackett Publishing Company. 2020.
    A comprehensive introduction to formal logic, Logic and Philosophy: A Modern Introduction is a rigorous yet accessible text, appropriate for students encountering the subject for the first time. Abundant, carefully crafted exercise sets accompanied by a clear, engaging exposition build to an exploration of sentential logic, first-order predicate logic, the theory of descriptions, identity, relations, set theory, modal logic, and Aristotelian logic. And as its title suggests, Logic and Philosophy…Read more
  •  68
    Reasoning (review)
    Teaching Philosophy 2 (3-4): 328-335. 1977.
  •  69
    Introduction to Logic (review)
    Teaching Philosophy 1 (2): 194-200. 1975.
  •  63
    The Breakdown of Cartesian Metaphysics
    Noûs 27 (2): 272-275. 1993.
  •  48
    Descartes’s Legacy: Minds and Meaning in Early Modern Philosophy
    with David Hausman
    University of Toronto Press. 1997.
    The Hausmans wed an intentional theory of ideas with a modern information theoretic approach in a critical tour of some of the most important issues in the philosophy of mind and some of the most outstanding figures in early modern philosophy.
  •  148
    It Ain't Necessity, so..
    Hume Studies 8 (2): 87-101. 1982.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:IT AIN'T NECESSITY, SO... (With Apologies to George Gershwin) I shall argue in this paper that what Hume calls the idea of necessary connection is mislabelled, and that what he ought to call the idea of necessary connection is not so labelled. My argument is not that there are, on Hume's view, real necessary connections between causes and their effects but rather that there is an idea of genuine necessary connection — what I call log…Read more
  •  134
    Descartes’s Secular Semantics
    with David Hausman
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 22 (1). 1992.
    … if we bear well in mind the scope of our senses and what it is exactly that reaches our faculty of thinking by way of them, we must admit that in no case are the ideas of things presented to us by the senses just as we form them in our thinking. So much so that there is nothing in our ideas which is not innate to the mind or the faculty of thinking, with the sole exception of those circumstances which relate to experience, such as the fact that we judge that this or that idea which we now have…Read more
  •  40
    Frontmatter
    with David Hausman
    In David Hausman & Alan Hausman (eds.), Descartes’s Legacy: Minds and Meaning in Early Modern Philosophy, University of Toronto Press. 1997.
  •  44
    Contents
    with David Hausman
    In David Hausman & Alan Hausman (eds.), Descartes’s Legacy: Minds and Meaning in Early Modern Philosophy, University of Toronto Press. 1997.
  •  30
    Notes
    with David Hausman
    In David Hausman & Alan Hausman (eds.), Descartes’s Legacy: Minds and Meaning in Early Modern Philosophy, University of Toronto Press. pp. 117-138. 1997.
  •  40
    Subject Index
    with David Hausman
    In David Hausman & Alan Hausman (eds.), Descartes’s Legacy: Minds and Meaning in Early Modern Philosophy, University of Toronto Press. pp. 145-148. 1997.
  •  29
    Name Index
    with David Hausman
    In David Hausman & Alan Hausman (eds.), Descartes’s Legacy: Minds and Meaning in Early Modern Philosophy, University of Toronto Press. pp. 143-144. 1997.
  •  147
    Logic and Philosophy: a modern introduction
    Wadsworth, Cengage Learning. 2013.
    As the title suggests, this is a book devoted not merely to logic; students will also examine the philosophical debates that led to the development of the field.
  •  138
    When Keats identified truth and beauty, he surely intended mere extensionality. I myself have never had much trouble with either half of the equivalence. Others have considerable difficulty. A case in point is the Watson-Allaire-Cummins interpretation of Berkeley's idealism, which I shall refer to henceforth as the inherence account. That account is put forward to answer an extremely perplexing question in the history of philosophy: Why did Berkeley embrace idealism, i.e., why did he hold that e…Read more
  •  73
    Identifying identity
    with James S. Kelly
    Erkenntnis 25 (3). 1986.
    Nelson Goodman argues against those who, like Carnap, claim extensional identity is the criterion for correct constructional definition. Goodman argues that internal logical difficulties sink such a criterion, thus he proposes his own criterion of extensional isomorphism. We argue that Goodman's criterion itself falls prey to his own arguments or else extensional identity is not shown faulty
  •  109
  •  104
    IV. Strawson on the traditional logic
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 12 (1-4): 254-259. 1969.
    In his Introduction to Logical Theory, Strawson argues that Aristotelian logic can be given a successful interpretation into ordinary English, but not into the symbolism of Principia Mathematica, on the grounds that Aristotelian logic and ordinary English share something absent in PM, namely, the doctrine of presupposition. It is argued that Strawson is mistaken. PM does justice to the logical rules of Aristotelian logic and also has a fully articulated doctrine of presupposition.
  • Non-Euclidean geometry and relative consistency proofs
    In Peter K. Machamer & Robert G. Turnbull (eds.), Motion and Time, Space and Matter, Ohio State University Press. 1976.
  •  51
    Berkeley's Semantic Dilemma: Beyond the Inherence Model
    with David Hausman
    History of Philosophy Quarterly 13 (2). 1996.