•  1
    Davidson on Causal Relevance
    Ratio 12 (1): 14-33. 2002.
    Davidson argues that mental properties are causally relevant properties. I argue that Davidson cannot appeal to ceteris paribus causal laws to ensure that these properties are causally relevant, if he wishes to retain his argument for anomalous monism. Second, I argue that the appeal to supervenience cannot, by itself, give us an account of the causal relevancy of mental properties. I argue that, while mental properties may indeed ‘make a difference’ to the causally efficacious properties of eve…Read more
  •  36
    Defending Non‐Epiphenomenal Event Dualism1
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 38 (3): 393-412. 2010.
  •  67
    Michael Dummett, Reasons to Act, and Bringing About the Past
    Philosophia 48 (2): 547-556. 2020.
    My intention in this paper is to outline and criticise some of the main ideas in Michael Dummett’s classic article “Bringing about the Past”. From Dummett’s remarks we can reconstruct two sceptical arguments designed to show that it can never be rational to attempt to bring about past events. Dummett is critical of both arguments. Though happy with Dummett’s reply to the first sceptical argument, I disagree with his reply to the second.
  •  60
    Reassessing Kripke’s Anti-Materialism and Almog’s Challenge
    Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 80 (3): 815-818. 2024.
    In this text, we point out some obvious commitments of the identity theory of mind which allow the identity theorist to sidestep Saul Kripke’s famous anti-materialist argument. We also argue that a recent paper by Joseph Almog fails to undermine Kripke’s internalism about sensations.
  •  222
    A comment on McCall
    Analysis 72 (2): 293-295. 2012.
    Storrs McCall claims to have a novel solution to the age-old problem of the incompatibility of free will and God's omniscience. His solution is based on the thesis of the supervenience of truth on being. I argue that this thesis plays no role in solving the ancient conundrum
  • Galen Strawson, Real Materialism and Other Essays
    Philosophy in Review 29 (4): 288. 2009.
  •  4
    Johnston on fission
    Sorites 15 (December): 87-93. 2004.
    In this discussion paper, I evaluate some arguments of Mark Johnston's which appear in his articles «Fission and the Facts» and «Reasons and Reductionism» . My primary concern is with his description of fission cases, and his assessment of the implications of such cases for value theory. In particular, Johnston advances the following three claims:Rejecting the intrinsicness of identity is an arbitrary response to the paradox of fission;Fission cases involve indeterminate identity;Contra Parfit, …Read more
  •  1
    Personal Identity
    Dissertation, University of Oxford (United Kingdom). 1988.
    Available from UMI in association with The British Library. Requires signed TDF. ;In this thesis I argue that we ought to accept some version of the Analysis view--the view that the identity of a person over time can be analysed in terms of physical and/or psychological continuities. I also argue that there is no sense in which we ought to be ontological reductionists about persons--a person is an essentially embodied, irreducible, entity whose identity over time is analysable in terms of physic…Read more
  •  3
    John Haugeland, Having Thought (review)
    Philosophy in Review 19 188-190. 1999.
  •  3
    William J. Fitzpatrick, Teleology and the Norms of Nature (review)
    Philosophy in Review 21 419-422. 2001.
  • MCGINN, C. "The Character of Mind" (review)
    Mind 93 (n/a): 461. 1984.
  •  1
    Persons and human beings
    Logos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España]. forthcoming.
  •  51
    Causal relevance and the mental : towards a non-reductive metaphysics
    Dissertation, Mcgill University (Canada). 1996.
    My aim in this thesis is to explain how a non-reductionist metaphysics can accommodate the causal relevance of the psychological and of the special sciences generally. According to physicalism, all behavior is caused by brain-states; given "folk-psychology", behavior is caused by some psychological state. If psychological states are distinct from brain states, then our behavior is overdetermined and this, it is claimed, is unacceptable. I argue that this consequence is not unacceptable. I claim …Read more
  •  1
    Vagueness, identity and the world
    Logique Et Analyse 135 (1): 349. 1991.
  •  72
    Lampert on the Fixity of the Past
    Organon F: Medzinárodný Časopis Pre Analytickú Filozofiu 31 (1): 90-93. 2024.
    In ‘A Puzzle about the Fixity of the Past’, Fabio Lampert argues that the principle of the fixity of the past is at odds with standard views about knowledge and the semantics for ‘actually’. In this paper, we show that Lampert’s argument fails because of its use of the material conditional.
  •  230
    Response to Goldstein
    Analysis 72 (4): 742-744. 2012.
    In ‘The Sorites is disguised nonsense’ Analysis (2012) 77: 61–5 L Goldstein attempts to show that some of the conditionals in any Sorites argument are nonsensical, and hence no Sorites argument can be sound. I give four reasons why this is not the case
  •  294
    Vagueness and identity
    Analysis 48 (3): 130. 1988.
    The thesis that there can be vague objects is the thesis that there can be identity statements which are indeterminate in truth-value (i.e., neither true nor false) as a result of vagueness (as opposed, e.g., to reference-failure), "the singular terms of which do not have their references fixed by vague descriptive means". (if this is "not" what is meant by the thesis that there can be vague objects, it is not clear what "is" meant by it.) the possibility of vague objects should not be taken, in…Read more
  •  36
    Some Thoughts on Animalism
    In Klaus Petrus (ed.), On Human Persons, De Gruyter. pp. 41-46. 2003.