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Consciousness and ConceivabilityKnowledge, Possibility and ConsciousnessCanadian Journal of Philosophy 33 (2): 285-304. 2003.
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455Because desires figure centrally in the explanation and prediction of rational action, many theorists have sought to analyse desire in terms of rational action. The simplest theory says that a desire is a mental state that plays a certain role in causing rational action. This chapter details this theory and considers several objections to it.
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10Definition in Frege's Foundations of ArithmeticPacific Philosophical Quarterly 77 (2): 88-107. 2017.
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58Introduction: Belief and AgencyCanadian Journal of Philosophy, Supplementary Volume 35 63-90. 2009.There is a difference between those things one does that manifest agency and those things that merely happen to one or that are the effects of one's agency. My typing these words manifests my agency – is an action of mine – whereas growing older is merely happening to me and making sounds as I type is but an effect of my action. Actions are sometimes but not always done for reasons and are characteristically but perhaps not invariably known by the agent without observation or inference. I'm typi…Read more
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859Sortal Quality: Pleasure, Desire, and Moral WorthOxford University Press. 2025.This started as a book about desire. I was hoping to complement what I had said about belief in my (2022). To believe something, I argued, is to be positioned to do, think and feel things in light of a possibility whose obtaining would make one right. I argued that believing is not representational, that belief states are not causes or causal powers, and that the objects of belief are ways the world might be and not representations of things. Believing is not so much a response to the world as a…Read more
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437Précis of on believing: being right in a world of possibilitiesInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 67 (8): 2457-2462. 2024.This is a précis of David Hunter’s On Believing: being right in a world of possibilities, which is the topic of an author-meets-critics symposium with comments by Daniel Drucker, Miriam Schleifer McCormick, and Mark Richard.
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92Desire as Belief, written by Alex Gregory (review)Journal of Moral Philosophy 21 (5-6): 700-703. 2024.
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Expression, Analysis and Understanding: Three Essays in the Philosophy of LanguageDissertation, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 1994.Chapter 1 concerns the role non-linguistic contextual factors play in the expression of thought. It is argued that contextual factors play a role in determining what is expressed by predicates. Several strategies for avoiding this conclusion are discussed and rejected. One strategy maintains that contextual factors determine, not what is expressed, but only what is otherwise communicated. Another contends that whatever can be expressed context dependently can also be expressed context independen…Read more
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1136The Nature of BeliefIn Eric Schwitzgebel & Jonathan Jong (eds.), What is Belief?, Oxford University Press. forthcoming.Philosophical accounts of the nature of belief, at least in the western tradition, are framed in large part by two ideas. One is that believing is a form of representing. The other is that a belief plays a causal role when a person acts on it. The standard picture of belief as a mental entity with representational properties and causal powers merges these two ideas. We are to think of beliefs as things that are true or false and that interact with desires, intentions, and emotions to bring about…Read more
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632Attitudes, objects, and norms: replies to Drucker, Schleifer McCormick, and RichardInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 67 (8): 2495-2508. 2024.I am extremely grateful for the very thoughtful and stimulating comments by Daniel Drucker, Miriam Schleifer McCormick,1 and Mark Richard, and for the close attention they gave my book (Hunter 2022...
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448Precis of: On Believing (OUP 2022)Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy. forthcoming.This is a précis of my book for an author-meets-critics session forthcoming in Inquiry. The commenters are Daniel Drucker, Miriam Schleifer McCormick, and Mark Richard.
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929Davidson on Practical KnowledgeJournal for the History of Analytical Philosophy 3 (9). 2015.Did Donald Davidson agree with G.E.M. Anscombe that action requires a distinctive form of agential awareness? The answer is No, at least according to the standard interpretation of Davidson’s account of action. A careful study of Davidson’s early writings, however, reveals a much more subtle conception of the role of agential belief in action. While the role of the general belief in Davidson’s theory is familiar and has been much discussed, virtually no attention has been paid to the singular be…Read more
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104Practical Reasoning and the First PersonPhilosophia 45 (2): 677-700. 2017.I argue that while practical reasoning is essentially first personal it does not require having essentially first personal thoughts. I start with an example of good practical reasoning. Because there is debate about what practical reasoning is, I discuss how different sides in those debates can accommodate my example. I then consider whether my example involves essentially first personal thoughts. It is not always clear what philosophers who would claim that it must have in mind. I identify two …Read more
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161On Believing: Being Right in a World of PossibilitiesOxford University Press. 2022.Developing original accounts of the many aspects of belief, On Believing puts the believer at the heart of the story. Developing a novel account of the normativity of belief, Hunter argues that the ethics of belief concern how a believer ought to be positioned in a world of possibilities.
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92Definition in Frege's' Foundations of Arithmetic'Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 77 (2): 88-107. 1996.
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967Inference as a Mental ActIn Lucy O'Brien & Matthew Soteriou (eds.), Mental actions, Oxford University Press. 2009.I will argue that a person is causally responsible for believing what she does. Through inference, she can sustain and change her perspective on the world. When she draws an inference, she causes herself to keep or to change her take on things. In a literal sense, she makes up her own mind as to how things are. And, I will suggest, she can do this voluntarily. It is in part because she is causally responsible for believing what she does that there are things that she ought to believe, and that w…Read more
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Directives for Knowledge and BeliefIn Conor McHugh, Jonathan Way & Daniel Whiting (eds.), Normativity: Epistemic and Practical, Oxford University Press. pp. 68-89. 2018.To understand belief directives it is helpful to start with knowledge directives, for they can be unspecific in an important way, are not as puzzling from a first-person point of view, and are viewed by common sense as more fundamental. A person’s duties, personal obligations, and rights are, common sense holds, relevant but not decisive to what they ought to know, and so to what they ought to believe. It further holds that people ought in general to know what they ought to do and even, to some …Read more
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148The metaphysics of responsible believingManuscrito 41 (4): 255-285. 2018.Contemporary philosophy of mind has tended to make the believer disappear. In response, Matt Boyle and Pamela Hieronymi have argued that believing is an act or activity, not a mental state. I argue that this response fails to fully critique contemporary accounts of believing. Such accounts assume that states of believing are particulars; with semantic properties; that we attend to in reflection and act on in inference; and with a rich causal life of their own. Together, these assumptions leave n…Read more
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102Belief: A Pragmatic Picture By Aaron Z. Zimmerman (review)Analysis 79 (1): 180-183. 2019._ Belief: A Pragmatic Picture _ By ZimmermanAaron Z.Oxford University Press, 2018. viii + 180 pp.
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81Contextualism, skepticism and objectivityIn Robert J. Stainton & Christopher Viger (eds.), Compositionality, Context, and Semantic Values: Essays in Honor of Ernie Lepore, Springer. 2008.In this paper, I try to make sense of the idea that true knowledge attributions characterize something that is more valuable than true belief and that survives even if, as Contextualism implies, contextual changes make it no longer identifiable by a knowledge attribution. I begin by sketching a familiar, pragmatic picture of assertion that helps us to understand and predict how the words “S knows that P” can be used to draw different epistemic distinctions in different contexts. I then argue tha…Read more
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135Consciousness and Conceivability, a critical notice of John Perry's *Knowledge, Possibility and Consciousness* (review)Canadian Journal of Philosophy 33 (2): 285-304. 2003.The thesis that anything conceivable is possible plays a central role in philosophical debates about the self. Discussions about free will have focused, at least in the last hundred years, on whether a free yet determined action is conceivable. If it is, and if anything conceivable is possible, then a deterministic physics would by itself pose no obstacle to human freedom. Current debates about the nature and value of personal survival turn on whether it is conceivable for a person to move from …Read more
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1622Lacking, needing, and wantingAnalytic Philosophy 64 (2): 143-160. 2023.I offer a novel conception of the nature of wanting. According to it, wanting is lacking something one needs. Lacking is not a normative notion but needing is, and that is how goodness figures in to wanting. What a thing needs derives from what it is to be a good thing of its kind. In people, wanting is connected to both knowledge and the will. A person can know that she wants something and can act on that knowledge. When she does, she is acting in light of that want and her want is a reason why…Read more
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66Manifesting Emotion (review)Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 97 (2): 507-511. 2018.My contribution to an Author-Meets-Critics session on Christine Tappolet's book *Emotions, Value, and Agency*.
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49A thoroughly updated introduction to the concepts, methods, and standards of critical thinking, _A Practical Guide to Critical Thinking: Deciding What to Do and Believe, Second Edition_ is a unique presentation of the formal strategies used when thinking through reasons and arguments in many areas of expertise. Pursuing an interdisciplinary approach to critical thinking, the book offers a broad conception of critical thinking and explores the practical relevance to conducting research across fie…Read more
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58New Essays on the Nature of Propositions (edited book)Routledge. 2015.These are exciting times for philosophical theorizing about propositions, with the last 15 years seeing the development of new approaches and the emergence of new theorists. Propositions have been invoked to explain thought and cognition, the nature and attribution of mental states, language and communication, and in philosophical treatments of truth, necessity and possibility. According to Frege and Russell, and their followers, propositions are structured mind- and language-independent abstrac…Read more
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64Review of *Context* Robert Stalnaker new York: Oxford university press, 2014; 248 pp.; $52.50 (review)Dialogue 55 (2). 2016.
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243Is thinking an action?Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 2 (2): 133-148. 2003.I argue that entertaining a proposition is not an action. Such events do not have intentional explanations and cannot be evaluated as rational or not. In these respects they contrast with assertions and compare well with perceptual events. One can control what one thinks by doing something, most familiarly by reciting a sentence. But even then the event of entertaining the proposition is not an action, though it is an event one has caused to happen, much as one might cause oneself to see a book …Read more
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Areas of Specialization
3 more
| Belief |
| Desire |
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Philosophy of Action |
| Metaphysics of Mind |
| Moral Realism |
| History of Meta-Ethics, Misc |
| Philosophy of Language |
Areas of Interest
| Metaphysics and Epistemology |
| Meta-Ethics |