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8Meaning, Rigidity, and ModalityIn Juliet Floyd & Sanford Shieh (eds.), Future pasts: the analytic tradition in twentieth-century philosophy, Oxford University Press. pp. 369-392. 2001.Saul Kripke’s “modal argument” against the description theory of proper names turns on a distinction between reference-fixing and meaning-giving. In this essay Shieh argues first that without further explanation of meaning-giving, it is unclear how this argument shows that the meanings of names cannot be given by descriptions. Second, Shieh shows that an explanation of meaning-giving sufficient to sustain the modal argument requires a notion of modal properties of meaning. This notion, in turn, …Read more
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5Wright and RevisionismIn Alexander Miller (ed.), Logic, Language, and Mathematics: Themes From the Philosophy of Crispin Wright, Oxford University Press. pp. 177-222. 2020.Do considerations in the theory of meaning pose a challenge to classical logic, and in particular to the law of excluded middle? Michael Dummett suggested an affirmative answer to this question, and advocated a form of logical revisionism. In his 1981 study “Anti-Realism and Revisionism,” Crispin Wright developed a critique of Dummett’s case for logical revisionism, but in more recent work (e.g., his 1992 book _Truth and Objectivity_), Wright has advanced an argument in favour of logical revisio…Read more
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3Logic, Modality, and Metaphysics in Early Analytic PhilosophyIn Leila Haaparanta & Heikki Koskinen (eds.), Categories of Being: Essays on Metaphysics and Logic, Oup Usa. pp. 293-318. 2012.This chapter treats C. I. Lewis' criticism of Bertrand Russell's material implication. This chapter gives an overview of the differences between Russell's conception of logic and contemporary ones. Lewis's criticism is often taken to rest on the divergence between material implication and our intuitive conception of logical consequence. The chapter argues that a more fundamental criticism Lewis makes is internal to Russell's conception: for Russell a system of logic must not merely enable correc…Read more
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8On Interpreting F rege on Truth and LogicIn Edited by Erich H. Reck (ed.), From Frege to Wittgenstein: Perspectives on Early Analytic Philosophy, Oup Usa. pp. 96-124. 2002.This essay analyzes a controversy between a recent, revisionary style of interpretation of Frege's conception of the relation between logic and semantics and the received interpretation that it opposes. I argue that, properly understood, the revisionary interpretation, especially that of Thomas Ricketts, differs less from such established interpretations as that of Dummett than the proponents of the former have claimed. However, the arguments underlying the revisionary interpretation have sugges…Read more
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5A survey of semantic relationsIn Marcelo Dascal, Dietfried Gerhardus, Kuno Lorenz & Georg Meggle (eds.), Sprachphilosophie: Ein internationales Handbuch zeitgenössischer Forschung, Walter De Gruyter. pp. 1227-1236. 1995.
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13A survey of semantic relationsIn Marcelo Dascal, Dietfried Gerhardus, Kuno Lorenz & Georg Meggle (eds.), Sprachphilosophie: Ein internationales Handbuch zeitgenössischer Forschung, Walter De Gruyter. pp. 1227-1236. 1995.
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7Could Kant Have Been a Logicist?In Valerio Rohden, Ricardo R. Terra, Guido A. De Almeida & Margit Ruffing (eds.), Recht und Frieden in der Philosophie Kants, Walter De Gruyter. pp. 203-214. 2008.
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28A Path to the Tractatus: From Facts and Forms Through Picturing to ModalityIn Jimmy Plourde & Mathieu Marion (eds.), Wittgenstein’s Pre-Tractatus Writings: Interpretations and Reappraisals, Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 111-144. 2024.This chapter traces Wittgenstein’s philosophical development culminating in the conception, central to Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, of propositions as involving essentially a primitive notion of possibility. I spell out three stages of this philosophical development, starting from criticism of Russell’s multiple-relation theory of judgment, going through the conception of propositions as signifying facts in “Notes on Logic,” to struggles with what Wittgenstein calls the “Wahrheitsprobleme” in…Read more
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De-Psychologizing Intuitionism: The Anti-Realist Rejection of Classical LogicDissertation, Harvard University. 1993.The most puzzling and intriguing aspect of intuitionism as a philosophy of mathematics is its claim that classical deductive reasoning in mathematics is illegitimate. The two most well-known proponents of this position are L. E. J. Brouwer and Michael Dummett. Both of their criticisms of the use of classical logic in mathematics have, by and large, been taken to depend on the thesis that the principle of bivalence does not apply to mathematical statements; and the difference between these critic…Read more
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43What Might Be in the Pure Business of Being True?Canadian Journal of Philosophy 1-13. forthcoming.I argue that Charles Travis’s interpretation of Frege, in Frege: The Pure Business of Being True, as consistent with Travis’s conception of occasion-sensitivity does not in fact require any modal notions, and so is consistent with the amodalist interpretation of Frege I elaborate in Necessity Lost.
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1Necessity lostOxford University Press. 2019.A long tradition, going back to Aristotle, conceives of logic in terms of necessity and possibility: a deductive argument is correct if it is not possible for the conclusion to be false when the premises are true. A relatively unknown feature of the analytic tradition in philosophy is that, at its very inception, this venerable conception of the relation between logic and necessity and possibility - the concepts of modality - was put into question. The founders of analytic philosophy, Gottlob Fr…Read more
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33Wittgenstein and RussellCambridge University Press. 2024.Responding to Russell is a constant throughout Wittgenstein's philosophizing. This Element focuses on Wittgenstein's criticisms of Russell's theories of judgment in the summer of 1913. Wittgenstein's response to these criticisms is of first-rate importance for his early philosophical development, setting the path to the conceptions of proposition and of logic in Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus. This Element also touches on further aspects of Wittgenstein's responses to Russell: the rejection of R…Read more
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44Returns of Modality: Wittgenstein’s Tractatus and Arthur PapIn Paola Cantù & Georg Schiemer (eds.), Logic, Epistemology, and Scientific Theories – From Peano to the Vienna Circle, Springer Nature Switzerland. pp. 249-265. 2023.This paper sketches the place of Arthur Pap’s work in the complex history of modality in the analytic tradition of philosophy, contrasting it with that of the early Wittgenstein. They represent two principal paths of the philosophical history of modality that converge in the logical empiricism of the Vienna Circle. Clarifying these paths go some way towards turning aside a myth, with some sway in contemporary philosophy, which occludes a philosophically fruitful view of the philosophical-histori…Read more
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Modality : Wittgenstein's Tractatus versus Saul KripkeIn Martin Gustafsson, Oskari Kuusela & Jakub Mácha (eds.), Engaging Kripke with Wittgenstein: the standard metre, contingent apriori, and beyond, Routledge. 2024.
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613Chapter 36. ModalityIn Michael Beaney (ed.) https://philpapers.org/rec/BEATOH, Oxford University Press. pp. 1043-1081. 2013.This chapter examines modality in the history of analytic philosophy. There were, in this history, two principal types of reductionism or eliminativism about modality, and two corresponding phases in the rejection of anti-modal stances. First, the founders of analytic philosophy, Frege, Moore, and Russell, took necessity and possibility to be reducible to more fundamental logical notions, where logic for these thinkers consists of truths about a mind- and language-independent reality extending b…Read more
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71IntroductionJournal for the History of Analytical Philosophy 9 (11). 2021.In this introduction we present the principal themes of the special issue and highlight the main interpretive theses of the contributions.
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24What is the Great Debt to Frege?Disputatio 10 (18). 2021.In this paper I examine two substantial interpretations of Wittgenstein’s criticisms of Frege’s conception of logic. One is based on Frege’s rejection of psychologism and alleges that this rejection engenders a tension that is resolved in the Tractatus. The other is based on the claim that there are patterns of inference involving what are now known as propositional attitude ascriptions that Frege’s conception of logic is not equipped to handle. I show that neither of these interpretations prese…Read more
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164Future pasts: the analytic tradition in twentieth-century philosophy (edited book)Oxford University Press. 2001.This collection of previously unpublished essays presents a new approach to the history of analytic philosophy--one that does not assume at the outset a general characterization of the distinguishing elements of the analytic tradition. Drawing together a venerable group of contributors, including John Rawls and Hilary Putnam, this volume explores the historical contexts in which analytic philosophers have worked, revealing multiple discontinuities and misunderstandings as well as a complex inter…Read more
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Future Pasts: The Analytic Tradition in Twentieth-Century PhilosophyPhilosophy 78 (303): 142-145. 2003.
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81Necessity Lost: Modality and Logic in Early Analytic Philosophy, Volume 1Oxford University Press. 2019.Philosophers since Aristotle have traditionally held that impossibilities make up the nature of logic. Sanford Shieh investigates an important but underexplored break with this tradition: Frege and Russell questioned whether there really are such things as possibilities or necessities, and sought the foundations of logic elsewhere.
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101Michael Dummett. The logical basis of metaphysics. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass., 1991, xi + 355 pp (review)Journal of Symbolic Logic 58 (3): 1086-1090. 1993.
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28Undecidability, Epistemology and Anti-Realist IntuitionismNordic Journal of Philosophical Logic 2 55-67. 1997.
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271On the conceptual foundations of anti-realismSynthese 115 (1): 33-70. 1998.The central premise of Michael Dummett's global argument for anti-realism is the thesis that a speaker's grasp of the meaning of a declarative, indexical-free sentence must be manifested in her uses of that sentence. This enigmatic thesis has been the subject of a great deal of discussion, and something of a consensus has emerged about its content and justification. The received view is that the manifestation thesis expresses a behaviorist and reductive theory of meaning, essentially in agreemen…Read more
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130Frege’s Philosophy of Mathematics (review)Philosophical Review 106 (2): 275. 1997.The days when Frege was more footnoted than read are now long gone; still, until very recently he has been read rather selectively. No doubt many had an inkling that there’s more to Frege than the sense/reference distinction; but few, one suspects, thought that his philosophy of mathematics was as fertile and intriguing as the present collection demonstrates. Perhaps, as Paul Benacerraf’s essay in this collection suggests, logical positivism should be held partly responsible for the neglect of t…Read more
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245Undecidability in anti-realismPhilosophia Mathematica 6 (3): 324-333. 1998.In this paper I attempt to clarify a relatively little-studied aspect of Michael Dummett's argument for intuitionism: its use of the notion of ‘undecidable’ sentence. I give a new analysis of this concept in epistemic terms, with which I resolve some puzzles and questions about how it works in the anti-realist critique of classical logic.
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252Reason’s Nearest KinPhilosophical Review 111 (3): 442-447. 2002.This book is a study of the philosophy of arithmetic in one of the most significant periods of its history—from Frege to Carnap—prefaced by an account of Kant. Potter aims at a philosophical history, a story told from an explicit interpretative perspective. These theories of arithmetic are seen as attempts to account for its “source of content” and “source of concepts.” Potter never explains these terms; I take the former to be the thing that, when we have knowledge of it or insight into it, pro…Read more
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85Reading Cavell (edited book)Routledge. 2006.Alongside Richard Rorty, Hilary Putnam and Jacques Derrida, Stanley Cavell is arguably one of the best-known philosophers in the world. In this state-of-the-art collection, Alice Crary explores the work of this original and interesting figure who has already been the subject of a number of books, conferences and Phd theses. A philosopher whose work encompasses a broad range of interests, such as Wittgenstein, scepticism in philosophy, the philosophy of art and film, Shakespeare, and philosophy o…Read more
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1Some Senses of Holism: An Anti-Realist's Guide to QuineIn Richard G. Heck (ed.), Language, Thought, and Logic: Essays in Honour of Michael Dummett, Oxford University Press. 1997.
Middletown, Connecticut, United States of America
Areas of Interest
| Metaphysics |
| Logic and Philosophy of Logic |
| Philosophy of Mathematics |