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12Tractatus 5.4611: ‘Signs for logical operations are punctuation marks’In Peter Sullivan & Michael Potter (eds.), Wittgenstein's Tractatus: History and Interpretation, Oxford University Press. pp. 97-124. 2013.This chapter assesses Wittgenstein’s claim at _Tractatus_ 5.4611 that signs for logical operations are punctuation marks. It first expounds Wittgenstein’s conception of logical operations within his truth-conditional, picture-theoretic account of meaning. A general argument is developed to elaborate in detail the case presented in compressed form at _Tractatus_ 5.41 in support of Wittgenstein’s _Grundgedanke_ (4.0312), that logical constants do not stand for anything. This argument shows that lo…Read more
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33Belnap and the Uniqueness of NegationStudia Logica 1-27. forthcoming.We take a close look at what is required to show the uniqueness of connectives in something very like Belnap’s sense. We find that negation demands more than conjunction, disjunction and the conditional. However, what it demands is quite in line with how we think of negation in a natural language but perhaps not in a formal language.
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15Act and value: Expectation and the representability of moral theoriesTheoria 57 (1‐2): 42-76. 2008.
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19Languages of Possibility: An essay in Philosophical LogicPhilosophical Books 31 (4): 222-224. 2009.
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26Science without Unity: Reconciling the Human and Natural SciencesPhilosophical Books 30 (1): 62-63. 2009.
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17The Mathematical Pull of Temptation RevisitedActa Analytica 24 (2): 91-96. 2009.In this paper, we defend and extend a (simple) mathematical model of akrasia.
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45On the Year of Publication of Tarski's ‘Der Wahrheitsbegriff in den formalisierten Sprachen’History and Philosophy of Logic 46 (2): 273-286. 2024.Drawing on recently published correspondence as well as on a survey of Polish and international philosophical activity published in 1937 and details concerning the publisher and bookseller Aleksander Mazzucato, I provide evidence that, contrary to some recent assertions (but in line with older bibliographical entries), Tarski's ‘Der Wahrheitsbegriff in den formalisierten Sprachen’ was not published in journal form until 1936, although preprints, lacking two corrections and a small addendum, were…Read more
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73On the Year of Publication of Tarski's ‘Der Wahrheitsbegriff in den formalisierten Sprachen’History and Philosophy of Logic 46 (2): 273-286. 2025.Drawing on recently published correspondence as well as on a survey of Polish and international philosophical activity published in 1937 and details concerning the publisher and bookseller Aleksander Mazzucato, I provide evidence that, contrary to some recent assertions (but in line with older bibliographical entries), Tarski's ‘Der Wahrheitsbegriff in den formalisierten Sprachen’ was not published in journal form until 1936, although preprints, lacking two corrections and a small addendum, were…Read more
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24Rewriting Lyotard: Figuration, Presentation, ResistanceDuke University Press. 2013.The visual arts operated as a touchstone for French philosopher Jean-François Lyotard, influencing his thinking on everything from epistemology to politics. Building on the recent publication of a bilingual, six-volume edition of his writings on contemporary art and artists, this special issue of_ Cultural Politics_ provides a focus on Lyotard’s aesthetics. The issue includes a review of Lyotard’s writings on art, a discussion of his early figural aesthetics, and an essay on Lyotard’s little-kno…Read more
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132Cavaillès on Gentzen ‘ dans son poêle’: A Brief Historical NoteHistory and Philosophy of Logic 46 (1): 135-137. 2025.In his biography of Gerhard Gentzen, Eckart Menzler-Trott includes an extract from a letter written by Jean Cavaillès to his friend and fellow philosopher of mathematics Albert Lautman on 3rd Septe...
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300Act and value: Expectation and the representability of moral theoriesTheoria 57 (1-2): 42-76. 1991.According to the axiologist the value concepts are basic and the deontic concepts are derivative. This paper addresses two fundamental problems that arise for the axiologist. Firstly, what ought the axiologist o understand by the value of an act? Second, what are the prospects in principle for an axiological representation of moral theories. Can the deontic concepts of any coherent moral theory be represented by an agent-netural axiology: (1) whatever structure those concepts have and (2) whatev…Read more
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59VII*—Tarski, Truth and Model TheoryProceedings of the Aristotelian Society 99 (1): 141-168. 1999.Peter Milne; VII*—Tarski, Truth and Model Theory, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 99, Issue 1, 1 June 1999, Pages 141–168, https://doi.org/10.11.
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73PraescriptumPhilosophy Today 66 (3): 587-603. 2022.This takes a little-known reading of Kafka’s “In the Penal Colony” by Lyotard as the starting point for an examination of the relation between body and law. Lyotard’s late notion of the intractable serves as a frame for this examination: explicitly claimed to be an absolute condition of morals, I argue it also has political implications, which are here drawn out through the link between the intractable and the body. In Lyotard’s later writings, the body is usually associated with an originary af…Read more
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114Inference to the Best ExplanationPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 53 (4): 970-972. 1993.
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112Methodological and conceptual challenges in rare and severe event forecast verificationNatural Hazards and Earth System Science 22 (2): 539-557. 2022.There are distinctive methodological and conceptual challenges in rare and severe event (RSE) forecast verification, that is, in the assessment of the quality of forecasts of rare but severe natural hazards such as avalanches, landslides or tornadoes. While some of these challenges have been discussed since the inception of the discipline in the 1880s, there is no consensus about how to assess RSE forecasts. This article offers a comprehensive and critical overview of the many different measures…Read more
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223Sensibility and the Law: On Rancière's Reading of LyotardSymposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 15 (2): 95-119. 2011.This paper responds to Rancière’s reading of Lyotard’s analysis of the sublime by attempting to articulate what Lyotard would call a “differend” between the two. Sketching out Rancière’s criticisms, I show that Lyotard’s analysis of the Kantian sublime is more defensible than Rancière claims. I then provide an alternative reading, one that frees Lyotard’s sublime from Rancière’s central accusation that it signals nothing more than the mind’s perpetual enslavement to the law of the Other. Read…Read more
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165Benenson, F. C. [1984]: Probability, Objectivity and Evidence. Routledge and Kegan Paul. Hardback £19.95. Pp. xii+284British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 37 (1): 123-126. 1986.
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184The Physicalization of MathematicsBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 45 (1): 305-340. 1994.
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68Languages of Possibility: An essay in Philosophical LogicPhilosophical Books 31 (4): 222-224. 1992.
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75I examine the ideas leading up to Wittgenstein's pronouncement at Tractatus 5.4611 that signs for logical operations are punctuation marks
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99Disjunction and Disjunctive SyllogismCanadian Journal of Philosophy 28 (1). 1998.The validity of argument by disjunctive syllogism has been denied by proponents of relevant and paraconsistent logic. DS is stigmatised for its role in inferences — most notably C.I. Lewis's derivation of that fallacy of irrelevance ex falso quodlibet — that involve both it and other rules of inference governing disjunction, or, to speak more precisely, other rules of inference taken to apply to the very same disjunction that obeys DS. In avoiding these inferences the road less travelled is to d…Read more