•  20
    Reviews (review)
    with R. D. Anderson, James Armstrong, Nicholas Beattie, Alan Blyth, Peter Britten, Ron Brown, Ruth Ingamells, Trevor Kerry, Dorothy Meade, Oluremi Omole, Leo Pekkala, Beverley Shaw, and Mary Tasker
    British Journal of Educational Studies 42 (1): 85-108. 1994.
  •  79
    Pupil Welfare and Counselling
    British Journal of Educational Studies 38 (4): 382-383. 1990.
  •  39
    When The Absurd Hero in American Fiction was first released in 1966, Granville Hicks praised it in a lead article for the Saturday Review as a sensitive and definitive study of a new trend in postwar American literature. In the years that followed, David Galloway’s analysis of the writings of John Updike, William Styron, Saul Bellow, and J. D. Salinger became a standard critical work, an indispensable tool for readers concerned with contemporary American literature. The New York Times described …Read more
  •  83
    Bernard Williams on living long and living well
    Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 18 (5): 1087-1090. 2012.
  •  229
    Man the rational animal?
    Synthese 122 (1): 165-78. 2000.
      This paper considers well known results of psychological researchinto the fallibility of human reason, and philosophical conclusionsthat some have drawn from these results. Close attention to theexact content of the results casts doubt on the reasoning that leadsto those conclusions
  •  70
    Wynn on Mathematical Empiricism
    Mind and Language 7 (4): 333-358. 1992.
  •  96
    Without Good Reason
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 60 (1): 234-236. 2000.
  •  189
    Seeing sequences
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 59 (1): 93-112. 1999.
    This article discusses Charles Parsons’ conception of mathematical intuition. Intuition, for Parsons, involves seeing-as: in seeing the sequences I I I and I I I as the same type, one intuits the type. The type is abstract, but intuiting the type is supposed to be epistemically analogous to ordinary perception of physical objects. And some non-trivial mathematical knowledge is supposed to be intuitable in this way, again in a way analogous to ordinary perceptual knowledge. In particular, the suc…Read more