•  130
    In this article I look at some the issues, problems and self-imposed dilemmas that emerge from Harry Frankfurt’s well-known essay ‘Freedom of the Will and the Concept of a Person’. That essay has exerted a widespread influence on subsequent thinking in ethics and philosophy of mind, especially through its central idea of ‘second-order’ desires and volitions. Frankfurt’s approach promises a third-way solution to certain longstanding issues – chiefly those of free-will versus determinism and the m…Read more
  •  2
    The new realism
    The Philosophers' Magazine 8 (8): 48-50. 1999.
  •  5
    Quantum confusion
    The Philosophers' Magazine 9 (9): 15-17. 2000.
  •  6
    Jerry Fodor
    The Philosophers' Magazine 25 (25): 52-52. 2004.
  •  16
    Ethics, Autonomy, and Self-Invention: A Reply to Patrick Shaw
    Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 31 (1): 92-103. 2000.
  • This book offers a detailed account of Spinoza's influence on various schools of present-day critical thought. That influence extends from Althusserian Marxism to hermeneutics, deconstruction, narrative poetics, new historicism, and the unclassifiable writings of a thinker like Giles Deleuze. The author combines a close exegesis of Spinoza's texts with a series of chapters that trace the evolution of literary theory from its period of high scientific rigour in the mid-1960s to its latest "postmo…Read more
  •  13
    Treading Water in Neurath's Ship: Quine, Davidson, Rorty
    Principia: An International Journal of Epistemology 2 (2). 1998.
    This article examines what I take to be some of the wrong turns and false dilemmas that analytic philosophy has run into since Quine's well-known attack on the two 'last dogmas' of old-style Logical Empiricism. In particular it traces the consequences of Quine's argument for a thoroughly naturalized epistemology, one that would view philosophy of science as 'all the philosophy we need', and that defines 'philosophy of science' in narrowly physicalist terms. I contend that this amounts to a third…Read more
  • This essay examines various issues surrounding the orthodox interpretation of quantum mechanics. These began with the famous debate between Einstein and Bohr on the topics of quantum uncertainty, wave-particle dualism, and nonlocal interaction. Where Bohr maintained the in-principle ‘completeness’ of orthodox QM - i.e., the conceptual impossibility that it should ever be subject to major revision - Einstein argued that it must be incomplete since it failed to provide any adequate interpretation.…Read more
  • "Positions": Jacques Derrida (review)
    British Journal of Aesthetics 21 (4): 372. 1981.
  • "In The Arresting Eye: The Rhetoric of Imagism": John T. Gage (review)
    British Journal of Aesthetics 22 (2): 184. 1982.
  • William Empson: The Critical Achievement
    British Journal of Aesthetics 35 (1): 89-89. 1995.
  •  89
    In this article I raise a number of issues concerning John McDowell’s widely influential revisionist reading of Kant. These have to do with what I see as his failure – despite ambitious claims in that regard – to overcome the various problematic dualisms that dogged Kant’s thought throughout the three Critiques. Moreover, as I show, they have continued to mark the discourse of those who inherit Kant’s agenda in this or that updated, e.g., ‘linguistified’ form. More specifically, I argue that McD…Read more
  •  9
    Anti-realism and relativism
    In Norris Christopher Charles (ed.), , . 2011.
  •  57
    This book is a critical introduction to the long-standing debate concerning the conceptual foundations of quantum mechanics and the problems it has posed for physicists and philosophers from Einstein to the present. Quantum theory has been a major infulence on postmodernism, and presents significant problems for realists. Keeping his own realist position in check, Christopher Norris subjects a wide range of key opponents and supporters of realism to a high and equal level of scrutiny. With a cha…Read more
  •  27
    This is an important piece of work from an influential and highly-acclaimed theorist exploring the New Musicology and other debates in recent philosophy of ...
  •  24
    To Rorty this seemed just one more example of the kinds of dilemma that philosophers typically got into by supposing that there must be a right way of doing things and that theirs was the method by which best to do it. His own work up to this point had been largely analytical in character, or addressed to problems within and around that first line of descent. However, thereafter--that is to say, in his writings subsequent to The Linguistic Turn--he swung right across to a pragmatist view which l…Read more
  •  22
    Truth in Derrida
    In Zeynep Direk & Leonard Lawlor (eds.), A Companion to Derrida, Wiley-blackwell. 2014.
    At one time, and not so long ago, anybody writing on the topic “Derrida and Truth” would most likely have felt obliged to begin by asserting that it didn't amount to a downright absurd, indeed a near‐oxymoronic coupling of name and noun. According to Derrida, this is the sole mode of thought that is able not only to respect the validity‐conditions for determinately true or false statements but also, by its holding fast to those conditions for as long as possible, to take due stock of the particu…Read more
  •  43
    Putnam, Peano, and the Malin Génie: could we possibly bewrong about elementary number-theory?
    Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 33 (2): 289-321. 2002.
    This article examines Hilary Putnam's work in the philosophy of mathematics and - more specifically - his arguments against mathematical realism or objectivism. These include a wide range of considerations, from Gödel's incompleteness-theorem and the limits of axiomatic set-theory as formalised in the Löwenheim-Skolem proof to Wittgenstein's sceptical thoughts about rule-following, Michael Dummett's anti-realist philosophy of mathematics, and certain problems – as Putnam sees them – with the con…Read more
  •  8
    Verden tapt av syne? Antirealisme, skeptisisme og empirisme
    Agora Journal for metafysisk spekulasjon 20 (1-2): 110-150. 2002.
  •  54
    Should philosophers take lessons from quantum theory?
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 42 (3 & 4). 1999.
    This essay examines some of the arguments in David Deutsch's book The Fabric of Reality , chief among them its case for the so-called many-universe interpretation of quantum mechanics (QM), presented as the only physically and logically consistent solution to the QM paradoxes of wave/particle dualism, remote simultaneous interaction, the observer-induced 'collapse of the wave-packet', etc. The hypothesis assumes that all possible outcomes are realized in every such momentary 'collapse', since th…Read more
  •  228
    Quantum nonlocality and the challenge to scientific realism
    Foundations of Science 5 (1): 3-45. 2000.
    In this essay I examine various aspects of the nearcentury-long debate concerning the conceptualfoundations of quantum mechanics and the problems ithas posed for physicists and philosophers fromEinstein to the present. Most crucial here is theissue of realism and the question whether quantumtheory is compatible with any kind of realist orcausal-explanatory account which goes beyond theempirical-predictive data. This was Einstein's chiefconcern in the famous series of exchanges with NielsBohr whe…Read more
  •  25
  •  46
    Paul de Man: Deconstruction and the Critique of Aesthetic Ideology
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 48 (3): 250-251. 1990.
    Paul de Man - literary critic, literary philosopher, "American deconstructionist" - changed the landscape of criticism through his rigorous theories and writings. Upon its original publication in 1988, Christopher Norris' book was the first full-length introduction to de Man, a reading that offers a much-needed corrective to the pattern of extreme antithetical response which marked the initial reception to de Man's writings. Norris addresses de Man's relationship to philosophical thinking in the…Read more
  •  80
    Harold Bloom: A poetics of reconstruction
    British Journal of Aesthetics 20 (1): 67-76. 1980.