•  4
    Donald Cary Williams
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2013.
  •  256
    Reply to Armstrong on dispositions
    Philosophical Quarterly 38 (150): 86-87. 1988.
    Defends the arguments for the irredicibility of dispositions to categorical properties in "Are dispositions reducible to categorical properties?" (Philosophical Quarterly 36, 1986) against the criticisms of D.M. Armstrong (Philosophical Quarterly 38, 1988).
  •  126
    The Vienna Circle's philosophical views were ludicrously simplistic and their perception of their place in history inflated, but like the Bloomsbury Circle with which they had connections, they managed to be interesting.
  •  116
    Review of Tom Jones, George Berkeley: A Philosophical Life (review)
    New Criterion 40 (2): 64-67. 2021.
    Reviews favourably Jones' life of Berkeley, but notes the omission of Berkeley's main argument for idealism.
  •  3
    Review of Rudolf Schuessler, The Debate on Probable Opinions in the Scholastic Tradition (review)
    Renaissance Quarterly 74 (4): 1379-1380. 2021.
    Favourably reviews Schuessler's book on the probability of opinions in the late scholastic tradition,
  •  25
    Eugene Wigner’s 1960 article on the “unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics” used the word “miracle” of the fit between abstract mathematics and physical reality. William Lane Craig has developed a theistic argument from Wigner’s hints, claiming that the best explanation of the “miraculous” fit is divine creation. It is argued that this argument does not succeed. An Aristotelian realist philosophy of mathematics renders the applicability of mathematics to physical reality unmysterious by show…Read more
  •  774
    These interlinking essays are connected by a core theme: the necessary structures in reality that allow certain knowledge of absolute truths. Franklin’s Aristotelian realist philosophy of mathematics shows how mathematical truths are directly about physical reality, and at the same time certainly and provably true. Ranging from mathematics to evidence evaluation to ethics, his philosophy of probability sees the relation of evidence to hypothesis, such as in science and law, as purely logical, he…Read more
  •  1331
    In a recent article, Christopher Ormell argues against the traditional mathematical view that the real numbers form an uncountably infinite set. He rejects the conclusion of Cantor’s diagonal argument for the higher, non-denumerable infinity of the real numbers. He does so on the basis that the classical conception of a real number is mys- terious, ineffable, and epistemically suspect. Instead, he urges that mathematics should admit only ‘well-defined’ real numbers as proper objects of study. In pr…Read more
  •  1200
    Eugene Wigner’s 1960 article on the “unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics” used the word “miracle” of the fit between abstract mathematics and physical reality. William Lane Craig has developed a theistic argument from Wigner’s hints, claiming that the best explanation of the “miraculous” fit is divine creation. It is argued that this argument does not succeed. An Aristotelian realist philosophy of mathematics renders the applicability of mathematics to physical reality unmysterious by show…Read more
  •  23
    The Scientific Revolution was far from the anti-Aristotelian movement traditionally pictured. Its applied mathematics pursued by new means the Aristotelian ideal of science as knowledge by insight into necessary causes. Newton’s derivation of Kepler’s elliptical planetary orbits from the inverse square law of gravity is a central example.
  •  58
    Talk about ethics involves a great number of different sorts of concepts – rules, virtues, values, outcomes, rights, etc … Ethics is about all those things, but it is not fundamentally about them. Let’s review them with a view to seeing why they are not basic.
  •  24
    Elected Ignorance (review)
    Quadrant 27 (12): 91-92. 1983.
    Reviews Lewis's account of the low interest Islamic culture has generally shown about other cultures, and suggests that Islamic openness caused by military weakness may be imitated by the Soviet Union.
  •  95
    Symbolic connectionism in natural language disambiguation
    with S. W. K. Chan
    IEEE Transactions on Neural Networks 9 739-755. 1998.
    Uses connectionism (neural networks) to extract the "gist" of a story in order to represent a context going forward for the disambiguation of incoming words as a text is processed.
  •  77
    Dynamic context generation for natural language understanding: A multifaceted knowledge approach
    IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man and Cybernetics Part A 33 23-41. 2003.
    We describe a comprehensive framework for text un- derstanding, based on the representation of context. It is designed..
  •  683
    The most successful science on the Aristotelian model was geometry in the style of Euclid. As advocated in the Posterior Analytics, Euclid’s Elements laid out geometry as a structure of theorems deduced from definitions and axioms that were evident to reason. However, geometry deals with the category of quantity, whereas Aristotelian definitions are paradigmatically in the category of substance. This chapter argues that definitions in the category of quantity have fulfilled well the Aristotelian…Read more
  •  81
    Probable Opinion
    In Peter R. Anstey (ed.), The Oxford handbook of British philosophy in the seventeenth century, Oxford University Press. 2013.
    This chapter examines the views of seventeenth-century British philosophers on probable opinion. It analyzes the use of the concept of probabilities in law and moral theology, and describes the Anglican writers' use of the probabilities to defend the Christian doctrine. The chapter also considers the relevant work of Thomas Hobbes and highlights the importance of John Graunt's founding of statistics in terms of obtaining inference from quantitative data.
  •  28
    Earl's Cool (review)
    Quadrant 42 (10): 85-86. 1992.
    Readers of “lives” of the famous know well the tendency of biography, and especially autobiography, to become steadily less interesting as the subject grows older. A predictable record of challenges met, enemies shafted, honours received and great men encountered often succeeds an account of a childhood that is a highly-coloured and unique emotional drama. Often the best pages are those on the subject’s schooldays, when the personality first tangles with the public realm. As Barry Oakley says of…Read more
  •  208
    Calwell, Catholicism and the origins of multicultural Australia
    Proceedings of the Australian Catholic Historical Society Conference 1 0-0. 2009.
    The large Eastern European migration program to Australia in the late 1940s was driven not only by Australia's need for migrants, but by Catholic views on the rights of refugees and an international Cold War plan to resettle the million people who had fled the Red Army.
  •  688
    The representation of context: Ideas from artificial intelligence
    Law, Probability and Risk 2 191-199. 2003.
    To move beyond vague platitudes about the importance of context in legal reasoning or natural language understanding, one must take account of ideas from artificial intelligence on how to represent context formally. Work on topics like prior probabilities, the theory-ladenness of observation, encyclopedic knowledge for disambiguation in language translation and pathology test diagnosis has produced a body of knowledge on how to represent context in artificial intelligence applications.
  •  453
    Low fertility among women graduates
    People and Place 12 (1): 37-45. 2004.
    Australian women who are university graduates have fewer children than non-graduates. In most cases this appears to be the result of circumstantial pressures not preference. Long years of study fill the most fertile years of women students and new graduates need further time to establish their careers. The chance of medical infertility increases with age so, for some, this means that childbearing is not postponed but ruled out. Graduates who do make the transition from university to professional…Read more
  •  40
    Some courses achieve existence, some have existence thrust upon them. It is normally a struggle to create in a scientific academic community a course on the philosophical or social aspects of science, but just occasionally a confluence of outside circumstances causes one to exist, irrespective of the wishes of the scientists. It is an opportunity, and taking advantage of it requires a slightly different approach from what is appropriate to the normal course of events, where a “social” course nee…Read more
  •  169
    Argues for a minimal level of quantification for the "proof beyond reasonable doubt" standard of criminal law: if a jury asks "Is 60% enough?", the answer should be "No."
  •  1638
    Mathematicians often speak of conjectures as being confirmed by evidence that falls short of proof. For their own conjectures, evidence justifies further work in looking for a proof. Those conjectures of mathematics that have long resisted proof, such as the Riemann hypothesis, have had to be considered in terms of the evidence for and against them. In recent decades, massive increases in computer power have permitted the gathering of huge amounts of numerical evidence, both for conjectures in p…Read more
  •  1437
    Stove's discovery of the worst argument in the world
    Philosophy 77 (4): 615-624. 2002.
    The winning entry in David Stove's Competition to Find the Worst Argument in the World was: “We can know things only as they are related to us/insofar as they fall under our conceptual schemes, etc., so, we cannot know things as they are in themselves.” That argument underpins many recent relativisms, including postmodernism, post-Kuhnian sociological philosophy of science, cultural relativism, sociobiological versions of ethical relativism, and so on. All such arguments have the same form as ‘W…Read more
  •  156
    Reflections on Kurt Gödel (review)
    History of European Ideas 13 (5): 637-638. 1991.
    A review of Hao Wang's Reflections on Kurt Goedel, emphasising Goedel's reaction against his Vienna Circle background.
  •  1465
    On the parallel between mathematics and morals
    Philosophy 79 (1): 97-119. 2004.
    The imperviousness of mathematical truth to anti-objectivist attacks has always heartened those who defend objectivism in other areas, such as ethics. It is argued that the parallel between mathematics and ethics is close and does support objectivist theories of ethics. The parallel depends on the foundational role of equality in both disciplines. Despite obvious differences in their subject matter, mathematics and ethics share a status as pure forms of knowledge, distinct from empirical science…Read more
  •  113
    Chance and structure (review)
    History of European Ideas 12 (2): 313-314. 1990.
  •  457
    Book reviews
    with Colin M. Patrick, Frances Gray, Patrick Hutchings, Horace Jeffery Hodges, William D. Wood, and John Bryant
    Sophia 42 (2): 135-148. 2003.
    Reviews David Stove's collection 'On Enlightenment", attacking Enlightenment shallowness, especially its attack on "superstition" when it had no alternative to offer.
  •  41
    Reviews (review)
    with Greg Murrie, James Strick, Russell Blackford, Tamas Pataki, John Forge, Dennis Georgakis, Andy Monk, Richard McDonough, Greg Wilby, R. W. Home, J. H. D. Amador, Jean Lachapelle, Anthony Corones, Adrienne Hallam, Emily Booth, David Oldroyd, William A. S. Sarjeant, Stewart Russell, Vladimir B. Popescu, Andrew Oakley, Roderick D. Buchanan, David Branagan, Tamara Kohn, and James Maffie
    Metascience 6 (2): 71-171. 1997.