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Jon Torgerson

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  • All publications (8)
  • On Tensed and Tenseless Discourse
    Dissertation, The University of Nebraska - Lincoln. 1971.
  •  17
    OUTWARDLY A MONSTER, ALL BEAUTY WITHIN (A Journey with Those Who See the Beauty Within)
    Metaphilosophy 22 (3): 239-250. 2007.
  •  6
    The Philosopher‐in‐Residence an Approach to Teaching Philosophy1
    Metaphilosophy 8 (2‐3): 215-221. 2007.
  •  55
    The philosopher-in-residence an approach to teaching philosophy
    Metaphilosophy 8 (2-3): 215-221. 1977.
  •  72
    Outwardly a monster, all beauty within (a journey with those who see the beauty within)
    Metaphilosophy 22 (3): 239-250. 1991.
    AestheticsAesthetic Cognition
  •  73
    Why I Teach Philosophy
    Teaching Philosophy 13 (1): 3-11. 1990.
    Philosophy of Education
  •  95
    Letters to the Editor
    with Marcia Yudkin, Nancy P. Daley, Daniel Bonevac, and Robert Koons
    Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 62 (4). 1989.
  •  141
    Reichenbach and Smart on Temporal Discourse
    Philosophy Research Archives 14 381-394. 1988.
    One of the problems which surfaces in philosophical literature as regularly as clockwork is the status of tensed and tenseless discourse. This received its most influential formulation in McTaggart The Nature of Existence. Two philosophers who respond to McTaggart are Hans Reichenbach and J.J.C. Smart. In this paper, I review their analysis of token-reflexive terms. First, I examine Reichenbach’s arguments for translating tensed discourse into tenseless discourse. In order to show its subtlety, …Read more
    One of the problems which surfaces in philosophical literature as regularly as clockwork is the status of tensed and tenseless discourse. This received its most influential formulation in McTaggart The Nature of Existence. Two philosophers who respond to McTaggart are Hans Reichenbach and J.J.C. Smart. In this paper, I review their analysis of token-reflexive terms. First, I examine Reichenbach’s arguments for translating tensed discourse into tenseless discourse. In order to show its subtlety, I also discuss Smart’s attempt to provide such translations. This analysis is adequate for a limited number of tenseless utterances. Yet even Reichenbach’s analysis fails in certain important instances. That this attempt fails is a strong argument for supposing that any other such attempt will fail as well. If correct, it should put to rest the philosophically tempting quest for a tenseless discourse.
    Temporal Expressions
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