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6I discuss Wittgenstein’s private language arguments in both the broad and the narrow sense, focusing on some key sections in PI §§243–315. I begin by introducing the traditional ideas Wittgenstein’s arguments can be seen as undermining.
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27Responsibility and the Special Question ‘Why?’Philosophy 1-28. forthcoming.Anscombe defined intentional action in terms of what she called ‘the special question “Why?”’ In the first part of this article, we present four objections to defining intentional action in this way. Then, in the second part, we show that Anscombe’s special question can instead be used to define a much broader category of conduct, namely that for which an agent is responsible. We thereby repurpose one of the most influential ideas in twentieth-century philosophy of action within a novel theory o…Read more
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13Entre devoir et obligationRevue de Métaphysique et de Morale 1 9-23. 2026.Être obligé de faire quelque chose implique-t‑il qu’on puisse le faire? Alors que Kant et Reid tenaient ce principe pour une vérité incontestable, le droit romain – d’où il provient – y reconnaissait explicitement des exceptions. La réponse défendue ici repose sur une distinction entre le devoir et l’obligation. Ce n’est pas tant que l’obligation a une plus grande force normative que le devoir, mais bien plutôt qu’ils appartiennent à des sphères distinctes. Le devoir est un concept intellectuel …Read more
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13A Companion to Wittgenstein (edited book)Wiley-Blackwell. 2025._A COMPANION TO WITTGENSTEIN_ The most comprehensive survey of Wittgenstein's thought yet compiled, this volume of fifty newly commissioned essays by leading interpreters of his philosophy is a keynote addition to the _Blackwell Companions to Philosophy_ series. Full of penetrating insights into the life and work of the most important philosopher of the twentieth century, the collection explores the full range of Wittgenstein’s contribution to philosophy. It includes essays on his intellectual d…Read more
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13The Objective Eye: Color, Form, and Reality in the Theory of ArtUniversity of Chicago Press. 2019.
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62Scepticism and Naturalism: Hume, Wittgenstein, Strawson (edited book)BRILL. 2025.This volume offers a comprehensive and comparative exploration of the idea of naturalism as it relates to the celebrated discussions of scepticism found in the work of David Hume, Ludwig Wittgenstein, and P. F. Strawson.
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53Voting: For and AgainstThink 23 (68): 5-10. 2024.This article defends the proposal that voters be permitted to choose whether to cast a vote for a candidate or against a candidate: a vote for a candidate would increase their total number of votes by one, as it does at present, whereas a vote against a candidate would decrease their total number of votes by one.
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102Truth and Truthfulness in PaintingPhilosophy 96 (4): 497-525. 2021.This article explores the place of truth and truthfulness in painting and drawing, and criticises logocentrism in the theory of truth.
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143Précis of Action, Knowledge, and WillPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 97 (1): 237-237. 2018.
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48EditorialBritish Journal of Aesthetics Current Issue 57 (2). 2017.We note with sadness the death of two highly respected colleagues, Fabian Dorsch and Peter Kivy. Fabian Dorsch, who was Associate Research Professor of Philosophy at the University of Fribourg, died unexpectedly on 21 February at the tragically early age of 42. Fabian was the driving force behind the European Society for Aesthetics, when it was founded in 2008, and was editor of Estetika: the Central European Journal of Aesthetics. An obituary notice can be found here: Peter Kivy, who was Profes…Read more
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231The unity of knowledgePhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 109 (1): 315-329. 2024.Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, EarlyView.
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36IntroductionIn Hans-Johann Glock & John Hyman (eds.), A Companion to Wittgenstein, Wiley-blackwell. 2017.Ludwig Wittgenstein crossed the second Styx, from living memory to history, during the years since the present century began. He is recognized today as one of the most original and powerful thinkers of the twentieth century, and his work belongs to the body of literature philosophers will read and interpret afresh in each generation, for as long as the European intellectual tradition survives. He wrote nothing in political philosophy or jurisprudence, very little in ethics, and the only sustaine…Read more
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119The roots of responsibilityThink 21 (61): 23-27. 2022.Under what circumstances can we hold someone responsible for what they do?
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99IntroductionIn Hans-Johann Glock & John Hyman (eds.), A Companion to Wittgenstein, Wiley-blackwell. pp. 1-4. 2017.
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177Strange Tools: Art and Human Nature, by Alva NoëMind 127 (506): 631-631. 2018.Mind 2017, 126, 304–309.
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92'The Urn and the Chamber PotIn Richard Allen & Malcolm Turvey (eds.), Wittgenstein, Theory and the Arts, Routledge. pp. 137. 2011.
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255II—Knowledge and BeliefAristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 91 (1): 267-288. 2017.In this article, I oppose the view that knowledge is a species of belief, and argue that belief should be defined in terms of knowledge, instead of the other way round. However, I reject the idea that the concept of knowledge has a primary or basic role or position in our system of mental and logical concepts, because I reject the hierarchical conception of philosophical analysis implicit in this idea. I approach the topic of knowledge and belief from a discussion of Richard Holton’s views about…Read more
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143in Proceedings of the 29th International Wittgenstein Symposium, Hölder-Pichler-Tempsky.
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1661. I want to discuss a new area of scientific research called neuro-aesthetics, which is the study of art by neuroscientists. The most prominent champions of neuroaesthetics are V.S. Ramachandran and Semir Zeki, both of whom have both made ambitious claims about their work. Ramachandran says boldly that he has discovered “the key to understanding what art really is”, and that his theory of art can be tested by brain imaging experiments, although he does not describe these experiments, or explain…Read more
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32I read Ernst Gombrich’s wonderful book Art and Illusion in 1981. I’d completed my BA a few months earlier, and I was spending a year in Geneva on a scholarship, before returning to Oxford to begin the BPhil. The topic in philosophy that interested me most at that time was perception, and I was struck by the extent to which Gombrich’s arguments relied on views about visual perception that he had inherited from the Helmholtzian tradition in psychology, and therefore indirectly from Locke and…Read more
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McGinn, M.-The Routledge Philosophy Guidebook to Wittgenstein and the Philosophical InvestigationsPhilosophical Books 39 173-175. 1998.
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33The evidence of our sensesIn Strawson and Kant, Oxford: Clarendon Press. 2003.The modern causal theory of perception—the theory defended by Grice and Strawson—differs from the classical theory advanced by Descartes and Locke in two ways. First, the modern theory is an exercise in conceptual analysis. Secondly, it is a version of what is sometimes called direct realism. I shall comment on these points in turn
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24IntroductionIn Hans Johann Glock & John Hyman (eds.), A Companion to Wittgenstein. Chichester, . pp. 1-4. 2017.