Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Department of Linguistics and Philosophy
PhD, 2011
Edinburgh, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Interest
Epistemology
Meta-Ethics
  •  196
    Generics are not quantificational: A new path from language models to semantic theory
    with Gustavo Cilleruelo Calderón, Emily Allaway, Barry Haddow, and Alexandra Birch
    Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics. forthcoming.
    Generic sentences express generalizations that tolerate exceptions without explicitly communicating information about quantities. Whether generics semantically encode information about quantities implicitly is controversial. This work takes a large-scale distributional approach to the semantic debate. It compares thousands of naturally occurring generics and quantificational sentences using language-model probabilities. It shows that language models recover many semantic facts about quantifiers.…Read more
  •  536
    The Flying Man, Not as Before
    In Jon McGinnis & M. S. Zarepour (eds.), Blackwell Companion to Ibn Sina, . forthcoming.
    This paper extends the case in 'Conscious Thought Under Sensory Deprivation'. It then presents an overlooked puzzle for scholars of Ibn Sina. It concludes by identifying other contexts in which Ibn Sina deploys the general method of the Flying Man — a method that, in his moral philosophy, resembles the Enlightenment social-contract tradition. Could modern liberalism have its roots in Islamic philosophy?
  •  795
    Cooperative speech is purposive. From the speaker's perspective, one crucial purpose is the transmission of knowledge. Cooperative speakers care about getting things right for their conversational partners. This attitude is a kind of respect. Cooperative speech is an ideal form of communication because participants have respect for each other. And having respect within a cooperative enterprise is sufficient for a particular kind of moral standing: we ought to respect those who have respect for u…Read more
  •  1499
    This paper does three things. First, it presents a new interpretation of Avicenna’s influential argument, the Flying Man. One nice feature of this interpretation is that it vindicates the argument’s validity. Unlike the cogito-inspired case for dualism, the Flying Man isn’t undermined by neglect of referential opacity. Second, it compares Avicenna’s argument with Anscombe’s take on the possibility of conscious thought under sensory deprivation. Finally, the paper concludes with a brief critical …Read more
  •  1152
    Frege cases and rationalizing explanations
    with Aidan Gray
    Noûs 59 (2): 517-541. 2025.
    Russellians, Relationists, and Fregeans disagree about the nature of propositional‐attitude content. We articulate a framework to characterize and evaluate this disagreement. The framework involves two claims: i) that we should individuate attitude content in whatever way fits best with the explanations that characteristically appeal to it, and ii) that we can understand those explanations by analogy with other ‘higher‐level’ explanations. Using the framework, we argue for an under‐appreciated f…Read more
  •  1658
    Is anything just plain good?
    Philosophical Studies 172 (6): 1485-1508. 2015.
    Geach and Thomson have argued that nothing is just plain good, because ‘good’ is, logically, an attributive adjective. The upshot, according to Geach and Thomson, is that consequentialism is unacceptable, since its very formulation requires a predicative use of ‘good’. Reactions to the argument have, for the most part, been uniform. Authors have converged on two challenging objections. First, although the logical tests that Geach and Thomson invoke clearly illustrate that ‘good’, as commonly use…Read more
  •  872
    ‘Not’ Again! Another Essay on the Metaphysics of Material Objects
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 94 (3): 711-737. 2017.
  •  806
    On Goodness, by David Conan Wolfsdorf (review)
    Mind 131 (521): 326-337. 2022.
    On Goodness, by WolfsdorfDavid Conan. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019. Pp. xxii + 314.
  •  930
    Weak generics
    Analysis 82 (3): 405-409. 2022.
    Some generic sentences seem to be true despite the fact that almost all the members of the relevant kind are exceptions. It’s controversial whether generics of this type express relatively weak generalizations or relatively strong ones. If the latter, then we’re systematically mistaken about their truth, but they make no trouble for our semantic theorizing. In this brief note, I present several arguments for the former: sentences of the relevant type are weak generics.
  •  1113
    A Little Puzzle about a Piece and a Puddle
    In Karen Bennett & Dean W. Zimmerman (eds.), Oxford Studies in Metaphysics Volume 12, Oxford University Press. pp. 231-261. 2020.
    A new puzzle about material constitution is presented and its implications are discussed. The moral of the story is that familiar intuitions supporting a neo-Aristotelian view of the material world are contradictory. To accommodate these intuitions is to embrace inconsistency. Therefore, neo-Aristotelianism is worse off for its intuitive appeal. Furthermore, the puzzle is used to argue for an account of ordinary modal thought and language that’s reconstructive, or ameliorative.
  •  1161
    The Onus in 'Ought'
    Analysis 83 (1): 13-21. 2023.
    We present a puzzle about deontic modals. An adequate resolution requires abandoning the standard theory. What to replace it with isn’t clear. We consider two possibilities.
  •  750
    Fixing Reference By Imogen Dickie (review)
    Analysis 77 (3): 659-662. 2017.
  •  740
    An Antinomy about Anaphora
    Linguistic Inquiry 42 (3): 509-517. 2011.
  •  1000
    Metalinguistic negation and metaphysical affirmation
    Philosophical Studies 167 (3): 497-517. 2014.
    In a series of articles, Kit Fine presents some highly compelling objections to monism, the doctrine that spatially coincident objects are identical. His objections rely on Leibniz’s Law and linguistic environments that appear to be immune to the standard charge of non-transparency and substitution failure. In this paper, I respond to Fine’s objections on behalf of the monist. Following Benjamin Schnieder, I observe that arguments from Leibniz’s Law are valid only if they involve descriptive, ra…Read more
  •  993
    Semantic deflationism deflated
    Synthese 196 (6): 2435-2454. 2019.
    Deflationism is the view that certain metaphysical debates are defective, leaving it open whether the defect is best explained in semantic, conceptual, or epistemic terms. Local semantic deflationism is the thesis that familiar metaphysical debates, which appear to be about the existence and identity of material objects, are merely verbal. It’s a form of local deflationism because it restricts itself to one particular area of metaphysics. It’s a form of semantic deflationism because the defect i…Read more
  •  2106
    Frege Cases and Bad Psychological Laws
    with Aidan Gray
    Mind 130 (520): 1253-1280. 2021.
    We draw attention to a series of implicit assumptions that have structured the debate about Frege’s Puzzle. Once these assumptions are made explicit, we rely on them to show that if one focuses exclusively on the issues raised by Frege cases, then one obtains a powerful consideration against a fine-grained conception of propositional-attitude content. In light of this consideration, a form of Russellianism about content becomes viable.
  •  1510
    The Identity of a Material Thing and its Matter
    Philosophical Quarterly 64 (256): 387-406. 2014.
    I have both a smaller and a larger aim. The smaller aim is polemical. Kit Fine believes that a material thing—a Romanesque statue, for example, or an open door—can be distinguished from its constituent matter—a piece of alloy, say, or a hunk of plastic—without recourse to modal or temporal considerations. The statue is Romanesque; the piece of alloy is not Romanesque. The door is open; the hunk of plastic is not open. I argue that these considerations, when combined with a proper understanding o…Read more
  •  993
    Generic cognition: A neglected source of context sensitivity
    Mind and Language 39 (4): 472-491. 2024.
    What is the relationship between the claim that generics articulate psychologically primitive generalizations and the claim that they exhibit a unique form of context sensitivity? This article maintains that the two claims are compatible. It develops and defends an overlooked form of contextualism grounded in the idiosyncrasies of system 1 thought.
  •  920
    Flaws of Formal Relationism
    Thought: A Journal of Philosophy 2 (4): 367-376. 2013.
    Formal relationism in the philosophy of mind is the thesis that folk psychological states should be individuated, at least partially, in terms of the purely formal inference-licensing relations between underlying mental representations. It's supposed to provide a Russellian alternative to a Fregean theory of propositional attitudes. I argue that there's an inconsistency between the motivation for formal relationism and the use to which it's put in defense of Russellian propositions. Furthermore,…Read more
  •  1122
    Context, content, and epistemic transparency
    with E. Glick
    Mind 119 (476): 1067-1086. 2011.
    We motivate the idea that presupposition is a transparent attitude. We then explain why epistemic opacity is not a serious problem for Robert Stalnaker's theory of content and conversation. We conclude with critical remarks about John Hawthorne and Ofra Magidor's alternative theory.