•  61
    Fiction, Meaning, and Utterance
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 44 (4): 389-403. 2001.
    A Gricean preamble concludes that though utterances have unintended meanings, those cannot be considered apart from their intended meanings. Intention distinguishes artworks from natural phenomena. To allocate an artwork to a genre, to accept its normal authorial boundaries and that its content is not random but chosen, is to concede intention's centrality. Wimsatt and Beardsley were right that meaning is public. But they think 'intention' is 'private' or 'unavailable'. However, it too is public…Read more
  •  36
    High Culture, Low Politics
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 58 189-212. 2006.
    My theme at its most general is the relation between culture and power; at its most specific, the relation between a particular type of culture, so-called high culture, and two types of power, namely governmental power, and the related but more diffuse power prevailing in society at large.
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  •  24
    Not enough, or thinking degree zero
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 41 (4). 1998.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  13
    Morality, Social Policy, and Berlin's Two Concepts
    Social Research: An International Quarterly 66 (4). 1999.
  •  4
    Throughout its ten related essays, Imagining the Real contrasts our abstract imaginings about the human world with the imaginative insights provided by art and experience. It questions, variously, the relevance of game theory and sociobiology to politics the supposed intrinsic values of liberal freedom, cultural change, and democratic action and the claims of Marxism, deconstruction and "Theory" generally to be non-ideological. More positively, it reinterprets fiction as a specific invitation to…Read more