•  717
    Eating Meat and Eating People
    Philosophy 53 (206). 1978.
    This paper is a response to a certain sort of argument defending the rights of animals. Part I is a brief explanation of the background and of the sort of argument I want to reject; Part II is an attempt to characterize those arguments: they contain fundamental confusions about moral relations between people and people and between people and animals. And Part III is an indication of what I think can still be said on—as it were–the animals' side
  •  585
  •  575
    The Importance of Being Human
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 29 35-62. 1991.
    I want to argue for the importance of the notion human being in ethics. Part I of the paper presents two different sorts of argument against treating that notion as important in ethics. A. Here is an example of the first sort of argument. What makes us human beings is that we have certain properties, but these properties, making us members of a certain biological species, have no moral relevance. If, on the other hand, we define being human in terms which are not tied to biological classificatio…Read more
  •  412
    Wittgenstein gives voice to an aspiration that is central to his later philosophy, well before he becomes later Wittgenstein, when he writes in §4.112 of the Tractatus that philosophy is not a matter of putting forward a doctrine or a theory, but consists rather in the practice of an activity – an activity he goes on to characterize as one of elucidation or clarification – an activity which he says does not result in philosophische Sätze, in propositions of philosophy, but rather in das Klarwerd…Read more
  •  395
    ‘We Can't Whistle It Either’: Legend and Reality
    European Journal of Philosophy 19 (3): 335-356. 2010.
    There is a famous quip of F.P. Ramsey's, which is my second epigraph. According to a widespread legend, the quip is a criticism of Wittgenstein's treatment in the Tractatus of what cannot be said. The remark is indeed Ramsey's, but he didn't mean what he is taken to mean in the legend. His quip, looked at in context, means something quite different. The legend is sometimes taken to provide support for a reading of the Tractatus according to which the nonsensical propositions of the book were int…Read more
  •  377
    Anything but argument?
    Philosophical Investigations 5 (1): 23-41. 1982.
  •  346
    Missing the Adventure
    Journal of Philosophy 82 (10): 530-531. 1985.
  •  268
    Publisher's description: The realistic spirit, a nonmetaphysical approach to philosophical thought concerned with the character of philosophy itself, informs all of the discussions in these essays by philosopher Cora Diamond. Diamond explains Wittgenstein's notoriously elusive later writings, explores the background to his thought in the work of Frege, and discusses ethics in a way that reflects his influence. Diamond's new reading of Wittgenstein challenges currently accepted interpretations an…Read more
  •  267
    Wittgensteinian ethics, it may be thought, is committed to detailed examination of realistically described cases, and hence to eschewing the abstract hypothetical cases, many of them quite bizarre, found in much contemporary moral theorizing. I argue that bizarre cases may be helpful in thinking about ethics, and that there is nothing in Wittgenstein's approach to philosophy that would go against this. I examine the case of the ring of Gyges from the Republic; and I consider also some contempora…Read more
  •  261
    Martha Nussbaum and the Need for Novels
    Philosophical Investigations 16 (2): 128-153. 1993.
  •  240
    Murdoch the Explorer
    Philosophical Topics 38 (1): 51-8. 2010.
    One of Iris Murdoch's most characteristic philosophical ideas is that any way of understanding what moral philosophy is and how it may be practised will be shaped by deep-going conceptual attitudes, of which moral philosophers themselves may be unaware. In her own philosophical writings, she tried to bring out the role played by these attitudes, and to unsettle accepted ideas about the subject. I examine some of the elements in her thought which open up different ways of understanding the subjec…Read more
  •  236
    The Dog that Gave Himself the Moral Law
    Midwest Studies in Philosophy 13 (1): 161-179. 1988.
  •  231
    Bernard Williams on the Human Prejudice
    Philosophical Investigations 41 (4): 379-398. 2018.
    In “The Human Prejudice”, Bernard Williams discusses our treating human beings differently in our moral thinking from the ways we treat other creatures. He criticises the idea that this expresses a prejudice, speciesism, analogous to racism and sexism. His essay has been misunderstood by some of its critics, including Peter Singer and Jeff McMahan. My essay sets out several questions one may have about Williams's essay, and explains how they can be answered. I make clear the connections between …Read more
  •  225
    Logical Syntax in Wittgenstein's Tractatus
    Philosophical Quarterly 55 (218). 2005.
    P.M.S. Hacker has argued that there are numerous misconceptions in James Conant's account of Wittgenstein's views and of those of Carnap. I discuss only Hacker's treatment of Conant on logical syntax in the _Tractatus. I try to show that passages in the _Tractatus which Hacker takes to count strongly against Conant's view do no such thing, and that he himself has not explained how he can account for a significant passage which certainly appears to support Conant's reading
  •  208
    What Nonsense Might Be
    Philosophy 56 (215). 1981.
    There is a natural view of nonsense, which owes what attraction it has to the apparent absence of alternatives. In Frege and Wittgenstein there is a view which goes against the natural one, and the purpose of this paper is to establish that it is a possible view of nonsense
  •  174
    How Old Are These Bones?: Putnam, Wittgenstein and Verification
    Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 73 (1): 99-150. 1999.
    Hilary Putnam has argued against philosophical theories which tie the content of truth-claims closely to the available methods of investigation and verification. Such theories, he argues, threaten our idea of human communication, which we take to be possible between people of different cultures and across periods of time during which methods of investigation change dramatically. Putnam rejects any reading of Wittgenstein which takes him to make a close tie between meaning and method of verificat…Read more
  •  140
    Wittgenstein and What Can Only Be True
    Nordic Wittgenstein Review 3 (2): 9-40. 2014.
    In her Introduction to Wittgenstein’s Tractatus , Elizabeth Anscombe took it to be a fault of the Tractatus that it excluded the statement “‘Someone’ is not the name of someone”, which she took to be obviously true. It is not a bipolar proposition, and its negation, she said, peters out into nothingness. I examine the question whether she is right that the Tractatus excludes such propositions, and I consider her example in relation to other propositions which, arguably at least, have no intellig…Read more
  •  139
    Intention and intentionality: essays in honour of G. E. M. Anscombe (edited book)
    with G. E. M. Anscombe and Jenny Teichman
    Cornell University Press. 1979.
  •  128
    Realism and Resolution
    Journal of Philosophical Research 22 75-86. 1997.
  •  120
    Slavery and Justice: Williams and Wiggins
    In Katharina Neges, Josef Mitterer, Sebastian Kletzl & Christian Kanzian (eds.), Realism - Relativism - Constructivism: Proceedings of the 38th International Wittgenstein Symposium in Kirchberg, De Gruyter. pp. 313-326. 2017.
  •  118
    Criticising from “Outside”
    Philosophical Investigations 36 (1): 114-132. 2013.
    I look at a disagreement between Elizabeth Anscombe, on the one hand, and Peter Winch and Ilham Dilman, on the other, about whether it is legitimate to call something an error that counts as knowledge within some alien system of belief; and I look also at the question what Wittgenstein's view was. I try to show that our understanding of what is real cannot be adequately elucidated if we consider only its role within language-games, and I argue that an important element in our thinking about what…Read more
  •  110
    What does a concept script do?
    Philosophical Quarterly 34 (136): 343-368. 1984.
  •  100
    Disagreements: Anscombe, Geach, Wittgenstein
    Philosophical Investigations 38 (1-2): 1-24. 2015.
    My essay explains and examines Anscombe's disagreement with Wittgenstein about what the Tractatus supposedly excludes. I also discuss her apparent disagreement with Geach about propositions that lack an intelligible negation. My discussion of these disagreements leads to the topic of Anscombe on the relation between the “business of thinking” and truth. I suggest that she takes the business of thinking to include thinking that helps to keep thinking on track. Since there is a tie between thinkin…Read more
  •  98
    Between Realism and Rortianism
    The Harvard Review of Philosophy 21 56-75. 2014.
  •  95
    Asymmetries in Thinking about Thought
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 90 (2): 299-315. 2016.
    My essay is concerned with two kinds of case of asymmetries in thinking about thought. If one says that there is nothing else to think but that so and so, one may mean either that there are no considerations which could make it reasonable to think the opposite, or that to think anything else is to be in a muddle, not really to be thinking anything. A case of the latter sort is important in Elizabeth Anscombe’s criticism of Wittgenstein’s Tractatus, while a case of the former sort is important fo…Read more
  •  83
    Asymmetries in Thinking about Thought
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 90 (2): 299-315. 2016.
    My essay is concerned with two kinds of case of asymmetries in thinking about thought. If one says that there is nothing else to think but that so and so, one may mean either that there are no considerations which could make it reasonable to think the opposite, or that to think anything else is to be in a muddle, not really to be thinking anything. A case of the latter sort is important in Elizabeth Anscombe’s criticism of Wittgenstein’s Tractatus, while a case of the former sort is important fo…Read more