•  307
    When nothing looks blue
    Synthese 199 (1-2): 2553-2561. 2020.
    Pitt :735–741, 2017) has argued that reductive representationalism entails an absurdity akin to the “paramechanical hypothesis” Ryle attributed to Descartes. This paper focuses on one version of reductive representationalism: the property-complex theory. We contend that at least insofar as the property-complex theory goes, Pitt is wrong. The result is not just a response to Pitt, but also a clarification of the aims and structure of the property-complex theory.
  •  110
    Applications of (Neutro/Anti)sophications to Semihypergroups
    with Florentin Smarandache and S. Mirvakili
    Journal of Mathematics 2021 (1): 1-7. 2021.
    A hypergroup, as a generalization of the notion of a group, was introduced by F. Marty in 1934. The first book in hypergroup theory was published by Corsini. Nowadays, hypergroups have found applications to many subjects of pure and applied mathematics, for example, in geometry, topology, cryptography and coding theory, graphs and hypergraphs, probability theory, binary relations, theory of fuzzy and rough sets and automata theory, physics, and also in biological inheritance.
  •  26
    Correction to: When nothing looks blue
    Synthese 199 (3): 11765-11766. 2021.
    A correction to this paper has been published: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11229-021-03218-0.
  •  2
    Singular Experience
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy. forthcoming.
    Almost every case of visual experience is as of a unified state of affairs and as of one or more specific particulars. I argue that a view on which the content of visual experience is a singular proposition does a better job at explaining these two features of visual experience than three popular theories: the Complex Property Theory, Generalism, and Fregean Particularism. The defended view, however, entails that there are no visual hallucinations traditionally understood. I make the case for th…Read more