•  87
    Taylor's Incompatibility Argument
    Dialogue 7 (2): 273-277. 1968.
  •  1
    Essence and accident
    Analysis 26 (6): 185. 1966.
  •  55
    The Discipline of the Cave
    Philosophical Review 77 (1): 118. 1968.
  •  217
    Excluded middle
    Journal of Philosophy 64 (24): 807-814. 1967.
    This is a paper on borderline cases and the law of Excluded Middle. In it I try to make use of some long forgotten, but perhaps valuable, work on the topic – a bit of Hegel for instance.
  •  64
    Butler on Bodies
    American Philosophical Quarterly 6 (1): 84-87. 1969.
  •  99
    Substance and Attribute (review)
    Philosophical Review 89 (2): 317-320. 1980.
  •  116
    Wiggins on identity
    Analysis 29 (5): 173-174. 1969.
  •  112
    Hedonism
    American Philosophical Quarterly 12 (3): 223-233. 1975.
  •  43
    In this book I try to defend a traditional kind of dualism in regard to ethical theory. The idea is that Conscience and Self-love offer distinct but rational and reasonable objectives in our decision-making. When they conflict, pure reason does not resolve the issue. With this picture in mind, I argue that a kind of Platonistic realism in regard to morality is (still) intellectually permissible – has not yet been defeated. That is to say, it is permissible to hold that we ought to do what is mor…Read more
  •  223
    Essence and Accident
    Analysis 26 (6): 77-81. 1966.
  •  168
    Shoemaker's arguments against Locke
    Philosophical Quarterly 19 (76): 263-265. 1969.
  •  155
    Defending continuants
    Noûs 4 (3): 279-283. 1970.
  •  389
    Rigid designation
    Journal of Philosophy 72 (13): 363-369. 1975.
    I have been told that for some twenty minutes after reading this paper Kripke believed I had shown that proper names could be non-rigid designators. (Then, apparently, he found a crucial error in the set-up.) I take great pride in this (alleged) fact.
  •  179
    Constitutivity and identity
    Noûs 5 (3): 313-319. 1971.
  •  110
    Persons and predicability
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 46 (2). 1968.
  •  165
    Theseus' Clothes-Pin
    Analysis 44 (2): 55-58. 1984.
  •  152
    ->Three Kinds of Classes
    American Philosophical Quarterly 3 (1): 77-81. 1966.
    This is a boiled down version of my doctoral dissertation. Ryle wouldn’t publish it, claiming that it is like ‘a well sharpened pencil that no one will ever use.’ I guess he turned out to be right. Nevertheless I think it was, and is, a good paper.
  •  991
    This paper attempts to show that Scott Soames has not given us an example of a contingent a priori truth. (What it probably shows is how confused I am on this topic.)
  •  151
    Divine Intervention and the Origin of Life
    Faith and Philosophy 10 (2): 259-161. 1993.
  •  857
    I would like to get this published somewhere; but who would publish it?
  •  846
    Very few (if any) people believe that the world was created, and is maintained, by a thoroughly contemptible and malicious being. Do we have good reason for our disbelief? In the first part of this paper I offer an argument for the non-existence of such a being. According to this argument there is just too much good - too may good things - in the world for the ‘malicious being’ theory to be plausible. In the second part of the paper I briefly consider the applicability of similar arguments to th…Read more
  •  923
    In the first two chapters of the Monologion Anselm shows, or tries to show that “Of all the things that exist, there is one that is the best, greatest and supreme.” In this paper I examine his argument.
  •  756
    Ethical dualists hold that we have good reason to pursue our own happiness and good reason to pursue moral goodness. It would seem that there is a potential conflict here. On the other hand there have been those who deny even the possibility of conflict, whether or not there is a God and an afterlife. Rawls seems to say, or hint, that this was Butlers’ view, and Kant, according to at least one person, argued that there cannot be conflict here. I think the conflict is sometimes real, and that ‘pr…Read more
  •  209
    Indeterminate people
    Analysis 45 (3): 141-145. 1985.
    Here is the paper that was attacked by George Rea in his “How many minds…?” paper. Has this issue been resolved? Can there be entities such that there is no definite answer to the question “Are there 13 minds at work here, or 14?”
  •  265
    Some Ontological Arguments
    Faith and Philosophy 10 (1): 18-32. 1993.
    This was an attempt to show what is wrong with Anselm’s ‘Ontological Argument’ for the existence of God. My present view is that Peter Millican has given us a similar, but much better line of attack in his “The One Fatal Flaw….” Paper.
  •  305
    Wittgenstein on the Resurrection
    Philosophical Investigations 33 (4): 321-338. 2010.
    Wittgenstein probably did not believe in Christ's Resurrection (as an historical event), but he may well have believed that if he had achieved a higher level of devoutness he would believe it. His view seems to have been that devout Christians are right in holding onto this belief tenaciously even though, in fact, it's false. It's historical falsity, is compatible with its religious validity, so to speak. So far as I can see, he did not think that devout Christians should believe that it doesn't…Read more
  •  67
    Cook's reductionis
    Philosophia 17 (4): 509-515. 1987.
  •  747
    If God necessarily exists this has some interesting consequences. In this little note I mention some of these.