• On Amplification
    In Patrick Connolly, Sandy Goldberg & Jennifer Saul (eds.), Conversations Online: Explorations in Philosophy of Language, Oxford University Press. pp. 400-420. 2025.
    Online speech is structured rather differently than offline speech. One important aspect of this, we argue, is that online speech environments are amplificatory. That is, these speech environments are designed to make the speech act of amplification easy, make amplification of others’ speech a predictable side-effect of one’s own, or both. In this essay, we first clarify what the speech act of amplification amounts to. Then we investigate the design choices of our present online speech environme…Read more
  • Reference
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2024.
    Reference is a relation that obtains between a variety of representational tokens and objects or properties. For instance, when I assert that “Barack Obama is a Democrat,” I use a particular sort of representational token—i.e. the name ‘Barack Obama’—which refers to a particular individual—i.e. Barack Obama. While names and other referential terms are hardly the only type of representational token capable of referring (consider, for instance, concepts, mental maps, and pictures), linguistic toke…Read more
  • What is the proper function of language?
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 67 (8): 2791-2814. 2024.
    It doesn’t have (just) one, and this matters for how we ought to pursue a theory of meaning and communication.
  • The Vagaries of Reference
    Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 9 (n/a). 2022.
    Evans (1973)’s Madagascar case and other cases like it have long been taken to represent a serious challenge for the Causal Theory of Names. The present essay answers this challenge on behalf of the causal theorist. The key is to treat acts of uttering names as events. Like other events, utterances of names sometimes turn out to have features which only become clear in retrospect.
  • What determines the meaning of a context-sensitive expression in a context? It is standardly assumed that, for a given expression type, there will be a unitary answer to this question; most of the literature on the subject involves arguments designed to show that one particular metasemantic proposal is superior to a specific set of alternatives. The task of the present essay will be to explore whether this is a warranted assumption, or whether the quest for the one true metasemantics might be a …Read more