•  88
    Polysemy and roots: Deep versus shallow fetching
    Mind and Language 40 (5): 472-491. 2025.
    The paper argues for a model of polysemy based on the blueprint offered by Paul Pietroski whereby the meaning of a lexical item is an instruction to fetch a concept from an address. We show that the bare idea of fetching admits of a deep construal, where a concept is fetched, and a shallow construal, where the instruction merely links a lexical item to an address without automatically retrieving anything from the address; retrieval only occurs when the item is embedded within a syntactic structu…Read more
  •  42
    This volume offers a collective critical engagement with the thought of Charles Travis, a leading contemporary philosopher of language and mind, and a scholar of the history of analytical philosophy. Twelve philosophers explore themes in his work, in sections focused on language, thought, and perception; and Travis responds.
  •  19
    Laws and Luck in Language
    with Georges Rey
    In Abrol Fairweather & Carlos Montemayor (eds.), Linguistic Luck: Safeguards and Threats to Linguistic Communication, Oxford University Press. pp. 88-123. 2023.
    The concern in this chapter will be with the different roles of laws and luck in linguistics, and specifically in what ways various phenomena of spoken language depend upon accidental or “lucky” facts that are not sufficiently stable to feature in laws, and so should not serve as the _foci_ of linguistic theory. This “nomological” conception is what drives the Chomskyan study of an “I-language” as an internal computational system underlying human linguistic “competence,” as opposed to the more w…Read more
  •  64
    Propositions: morals from copredication
    Synthese 207 (1): 13. 2026.
    Sentence meanings and propositions are intimate, but don’t exactly get on. Two familiar divergences are (i) the diversity of linguistic forms (within and between languages) that intuitively ‘say’ the same thing, such as active/passive pairs, and (ii) the contextual determination of propositional content that the type linguistic form leaves undetermined. The paper doesn’t raise doubts about these phenomena, but offers a general framework under which sentence meaning is best theorised as mere cons…Read more
  •  43
    Speech production models typically assume that such production begins with the message that the speaker wants to convey. Such a message must be formatted in such a way that the other stages in speech production go swiftly, which means that it must be formatted according to the expressive demands and powers of the language that the speakers employ. Levelt and followers think that there can be a re-formatting stage that translates thoughts, couched in some other non-linguistic format, into message…Read more
  •  18
    Copredication as Illusion
    Journal of Semantics 40 (2-3): 359-389. 2023.
  •  45
    Recently, several philosophers have discussed conjunction reduction and other tests for polysemy/homonymy with reference to the potential ambiguity of certain expressions central to various philosophical debates. However, it has been argued that the conjunction reduction tests are not decisive in settling such matters, because some polysemous terms are acceptable under conjunction reduction. For example, conjunctions involving polysemous book and lunch can be reduced: The book is heavy and inter…Read more
  •  62
    Thinking with words: the role of externalization
    with Agustín Vicente and Mark Jary
    Linguistics and Philosophy 48 (5): 1005-1025. 2025.
    According to Chomsky and followers, natural language is a computational system that generates syntactic structures that are counterfunctional with respect to communication. Consequently, language is more appropriately considered as being “designed” for thought rather than communication. In this paper, we argue that, while natural language, understood as an internal computational system along standard generative lines, is recruited for distinctive human thinking, such recruitment also requires, a…Read more
  •  56
    Cannon, WB, 297 Caraka. 41, 67,280 Carroll, Noel, 15 Chisholm, Roderick M., 15 Chrysippus the Stoic, 9
    with Rumania Bhatta, Siriga Bhupala, Wang Bi, Purushottama Bilimoria, Perry Black, Lawrence A. Blum, Jiwei Ci, Stanley G. Clarke, and John M. Cooper
    In Roger Ames, Robert C. Solomon & Joel Marks (eds.), Emotions in Asian Thought: A Dialogue in Comparative Philosophy, Suny Press. 1995.
  •  83
    The Apocryphal Ezekiel
    with Michael E. Stone, Benjamin G. Wright, and David Satran
    Journal of the American Oriental Society 122 (1): 170. 2002.
  •  1
    Belief Revision
    Dissertation, Princeton University. 1991.
    The dissertation gives an account of the principles guiding the rational revision of belief. I develop a non-probabilistic account of belief revision. My central thesis is the claim that there are two quite different kinds of rational belief change; two methods suited to two different sorts of situation. I call these methods updating and supposing. This claim, presented in Chapter Two, is argued on the basis of results proved in Chapter One. Chapters Three and Four are applications of the distin…Read more
  •  5
    Teacher and servant
    Revue D'Histoire Et de Philosophie Religieuses 80 (1): 37-50. 2000.
  •  84
    Chomsky and Intentionality
    In Nicholas Allott, Terje Lohndal & Georges Rey (eds.), A Companion to Chomsky, Wiley-blackwell. 2021.
    This chapter describes some basic, often puzzling features of intentionality, with an eye to its role not so much in ordinary folk ascriptions but in serious psychological explanations, especially in many of Noam Chomsky's own presentations of his theory. It then considers Chomsky's censure of the notion, leading him to deny what would seem to be the explicit intentionalisms on which he seems to rely. Implicit in Chomsky's treatment of grammar is the idea that the positing of the language facult…Read more
  •  57
    Attending to Race Does Not Increase Race Aftereffects
    with Nicolas Davidenko, Chan Q. Vu, and Nathan H. Heller
    Frontiers in Psychology 7. 2016.
  •  59
    Families in Ancient Israel
    with Hector Avalos, Leo G. Perdue, Joseph Blenkinsopp, and Carol Meyers
    Journal of the American Oriental Society 119 (4): 691. 1999.
  •  10
    Critical Study (review)
    What is Truth? is a collection of original philosophical articles by many of the central figures in the field. Most of the contributions are focused on deflationism, for and against, although other approaches have a fair airing, and some novel accounts are presented. The intrinsic worth of many of the papers apart, the interest of the collection arises, I think, from its bringing into relief a number of problematic lacunae within the extant deflationisms, which, I predict, will be the main area …Read more
  •  71
    Expressions, Sentences, Propositions
    Erkenntnis 59 (2): 233-262. 2003.
    The paper articulates and defends the view that paired structures of mentally 'represented' phonological and semantic features should, for all theoretical purposes, replace the notions of proposition and sentence. Following Chomsky, I refer to such pairs as expressions (EXP). In the first part, I elaborate the notion of an EXP and contrast it with that of sentence/proposition. The paper's second part questions a range of considerations which putatively show that propositions are fundamental to o…Read more
  •  1280
    Unsharpenable Vagueness
    Philosophical Topics 28 (1): 1-10. 2000.
    A plausible thought about vagueness is that it involves semantic incompleteness. To say that a predicate is vague is to say (at the very least) that its extension is incompletely specified. Where there is incomplete specification of extension there is indeterminacy, an indeterminacy between various ways in which the specification of the predicate might be completed or sharpened. In this paper we show that this idea is bound to founder by presenting an argument to the effect that there are vague …Read more
  •  187
    The redundancy of the act
    Synthese 195 (8): 3519-3545. 2018.
    The theory that structured propositions are complex act-types has been independently articulated by Peter Hanks and Scott Soames. The present paper argues that the role of the act in such theories is supererogatory, for the individuation conditions of the act-based propositions remain wholly at the level of concepts and their formal combination, features which the traditional structured proposition theorist endorses. Thus, it is shown that the traditional problems for structured propositions are…Read more
  •  237
    Meta-scientific Eliminativism: A Reconsideration of Chomsky's Review of Skinner's Verbal Behavior
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 58 (4): 625-658. 2007.
    The paper considers our ordinary mentalistic discourse in relation to what we should expect from any genuine science of the mind. A meta-scientific eliminativism is commended and distinguished from the more familiar eliminativism of Skinner and the Churchlands. Meta-scientific eliminativism views folk psychology qua folksy as unsuited to offer insight into the structure of cognition, although it might otherwise be indispensable for our social commerce and self-understanding. This position flows …Read more
  •  191
    Genericity sans Gen
    Mind and Language 33 (1): 34-64. 2018.
    Generics are exception-admitting generalisations, which find expression in apparently diverse linguistic forms. A standard claim is that there is a hidden linguistic unity to genericity in the form of a covert operator, Gen. This article surveys and rejects a range of considerations that purport to show Gen to be syntactically essential to the explanation of a range of linguistic phenomena connected to genericity. The conclusion reached is that genericity is not a specifically linguistic propert…Read more
  •  238
    Cuts and Clouds
    Analysis 72 (1): 138-145. 2012.
  •  337
    Syntax, More or Less
    Mind 116 (464): 805-850. 2007.
    Much of the best contemporary work in the philosophy of language and content makes appeal to the theories developed in generative syntax. In particular, there is a presumption that—at some level and in some way—the structures provided by syntactic theory mesh with or support our conception of content/linguistic meaning as grounded in our first-person understanding of our communicative speech acts. This paper will suggest that there is no such tight fit. Its claim will be that, if recent generati…Read more
  •  134