David Wiggins

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  • Sameness and Substance
    Philosophy 57 (220): 269-272. 1982.
  •  3
    Metaphysics
    with Tim Crane
    In A. C. Grayling (ed.), Philosophy 1: A Guide Through the Subject, Oxford University Press. 1998.
  •  1
    Knowing how to and knowing that
    In Hans-Johann Glock & John Hyman (eds.), Wittgenstein and Analytic Philosophy: Essays for P. M. S. Hacker, Oxford University Press. 2009.
  •  1102
    On being in the same place at the same time
    Philosophical Review 77 (1): 90-95. 1968.
  •  510
    Practical Knowledge: Knowing How To and Knowing That
    Mind 121 (481): 97-130. 2012.
    Ryle’s account of practical knowing is much controverted. The paper seeks to place present disputations in a larger context and draw attention to the connection between Ryle’s preoccupations and Aristotle’s account of practical reason, practical intelligence, and the way in which human beings enter into the way of being and acting that Aristotle denominates ethos . Considering matters in this framework, the author finds inconclusive the arguments that Stanley and Williamson offer for seeing know…Read more
  •  219
    The reflections recorded in this paper arise from three moments in the theory of definition and of conceptual analysis. The moments are: Frege’s review of Husserl’s Philosophy of Arithmetic, the discussion there of the paradox of analysis, and the division that Frege marks, ensuing upon his distinction of Sinn/sense from Bedeutung/reference, between two different conceptions of definition; Leibniz’s still serviceable account of a distinction between the clarity and the distinctness of ideas---a …Read more
  •  133
    Sameness, substance and the human animal
    The Philosophers' Magazine 12 (12): 50-53. 2000.
  •  223
    The presidential address: nature, respect for nature, and the human scale of values
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 100 (1). 2000.
    I. The development of the earth has not progressed in the way that Leibniz so hopefully envisaged three hundred years ago. Late twentieth century disillusion demonstrated by citation. II-IV. In making sense of that disillusion it is a good beginning to abstain from speculative extravagance and simply to bring the human scale of values to bear; then to inquire how far the destruction of that which we prize has been gratuitous or economically subsidized. The human scale of values is not a scale of…Read more
  •  39
    Solidarity and the root of the ethical
    Department of Philosophy, University of Kansas. 2008.
  •  233
    Solidarity and the Root of the Ethical
    Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 71 (2): 239-269. 2009.
    This is the text of The Lindley Lecture for 2008, given by David Wiggins, a British philosopher
  • Psychoanalysis, Mind and Art (edited book)
    Blackwell. 1992.
  •  1
    Ayer on Monism, Pluralism and Essence
    In A. J. Ayer & Graham Macdonald (eds.), Perception and identity: essays presented to A. J. Ayer, with his replies, Cornell University Press. pp. 131--160. 1979.
  •  71
    For this volume David Wiggins has selected and revised eleven of his essays in an area of metaphysics where his work has been particularly influential, and he has added a substantial introduction and one new unpublished essay. Among the subjects treated are substance, identity, persistence, persons, sortals, and artefacts.
  •  79
    A Sensible Subjectivism
    Oxford: Oxford University Press. 1987.
  •  379
    IV*—Moral Cognitivism, Moral Relativism and Motivating Moral Beliefs
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 91 (1): 61-86. 1991.
    David Wiggins; IV*—Moral Cognitivism, Moral Relativism and Motivating Moral Beliefs, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 91, Issue 1, 1 June 1991, P.
  •  194
    Ayer's Ethical Theory: Emotivism or Subjectivism?
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 30 181-196. 1991.
    In 1936, in a chapter of Language, Truth and Logic clearly influenced by Hume and influenced also by Ogden's and Richards's The Meaning of Meaning, Ayer claimed that judgments of value, in so far as they are not scientific statements, are not in the literal sense significant but are simply expressions of emotion which can be neither true nor false. To say ‘You acted wrongly in stealing that money’ is not to state any more than one would have stated by merely saying ‘you stole that money’. To add…Read more
  •  235
    Sortal Concepts: A Reply To Xu
    Mind and Language 12 (3-4): 413-421. 1997.
  •  125
    Reply to Shoemaker
    The Monist 87 (4): 594-609. 2004.
    In “Brown-Brownson Revisited”, Sydney Shoemaker’s response to Sameness and Substance Renewed, I am not sure how many of my own arguments or conclusions I quite recognize. Shoemaker reads me at certain important points as making further moves in a game in which he is a justly acclaimed virtuoso. But S & SR claims in effect that there is no such game and nobody should try to play it.
  •  474
    Needs, Values, Truth brings together of some of the most important and influential writings by a leading contemporary philosopher, drawn from twenty-five years of his work in the broad area of the philosophy of value. The author ranges between problems of ethics, meta-ethics, philosophy of mind, and philosophy of logic and language, looking at questions relating to meaning, truth and objectivity in judgements of value. For this third edition he has added a new essay on incommensurability, in add…Read more
  •  382
    The author expounds critically Roderick Chisholm's theory of modal mereology and undertakes to redeploy and reconcile this with the Lesniewski-Tarski theory of part-whole, modally augmented. An argument is presented for the principle that what belongs to an aggregate as a part belongs essentially to it. This principle is argued not to imply that every part of an ordinary substance is essentially part of it (such substances not being aggregates), and to give no particular support to Roderick Chis…Read more
  •  447
    Identity, Individuation and Substance
    European Journal of Philosophy 20 (1): 1-25. 2012.
    The paper takes off from the problem of finding a proper content for the relation of identity as it holds or fails to hold among ordinary things or substances. The necessary conditions of identity are familiar, the sufficient conditions less so. The search is for conditions at once better usable than the Leibnizian Identity of Indiscernibles (independently suspect) and strong enough to underwrite all the formal properties of the relation.It is contended that the key to this problem rests at the …Read more
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