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200The Insurmountable Privacy of ThoughtPhilosophy and Literature 49 (2): 471-492. 2025.In several remarks by the later Ludwig Wittgenstein, we can find a conception of private language that suggests an interesting sense in which private language exists. This paper offers an interpretation of these remarks, before outlining some practical implications. The analysis makes reference to Plato’s Phaedrus, including the dialogue’s paradoxical argument according to which writing cannot achieve its purpose. The paper argues that Plato, Socrates, and Wittgenstein all thought about the same…Read more
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124Kripke and Wittgenstein on proper namesPhilosophical Investigations 49. 2025.This paper argues that Kripke's and Wittgenstein's respective accounts of proper names are fundamentally the same. Specifically, it is argued that Wittgenstein's later philosophy is not inconsistent with Kripke's theory in the ways that Kripke himself sometimes claimed it was; on the contrary, it contains all of the key ingredients of Kripke's main line of argument. If this is correct, a significant part of the recent history of Anglophone philosophy may have to be reevaluated. In particular, Wi…Read more
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41Die Paradoxie und paradoxe ObjekteDeutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 73 (4): 451-476. 2025.A new theory of paradox is presented and defended. According to this theory, something is a paradox if and only if a subject cannot believe it, or something about it, despite having tried. Three rival theories are criticised and rejected. Section 1 rejects the theory according to which a paradox is an inconsistent set of individually plausible propositions. Section 2 rejects the Quinean account according to which a paradox is an apparently absurd conclusion that is apparently sustained by an arg…Read more
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913Turing’s Philosophy of AIJournal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 56 513-529. 2025.This paper presents a short historical analysis of Alan Turing’s work on artificial intelligence (AI), with a focus on its early beginnings and philosophical nature, and argues that it remains fresh and inspiring even today. The discussion centres on how Turing typically approached philosophical questions concerning AI: namely, by introducing a conceptual device rooted in common sense to give a precise definition of some fundamental term, such as ‘intelligence’, ‘computer’, ‘learning’, or ‘think…Read more
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751Method and Morality: Elenchus from Socrates to WittgensteinSynthese 205 (117): 1-28. 2025.This paper argues that the later Wittgenstein’s philosophical practice constitutes an elaboration of the Socratic search for truth by question-and-answer adversary argument, which led Wittgenstein to develop new methods for uncovering and resolving deep disagreements. On a methodological level, it is argued that this Socratic method (known as Socratic elenchus) is essentially a search for deep disagreement and necessarily raises philosophical questions concerning morality.
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1424The biological objection against strong AIInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy. forthcoming.According to the biological objection against strong artificial intelligence (AI), machines cannot have human mindedness – that is, they cannot be conscious, intelligent, sentient, etc. in the precise way that a human being typically is – because this requires being alive, and machines are not alive. Proponents of the objection include John Lucas, Hubert Dreyfus, and John Searle. The present paper explains the nature and significance of the biological objection, before arguing that it currently …Read more
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416Cognitivism about religious belief in later WittgensteinInternational Journal for Philosophy of Religion 97. 2025.Wittgensteinian philosophy of religion has traditionally been grounded in non-cognitivism about religious belief. This paper shows that the Wittgensteinian tradition has wrongly neglected a significant movement towards cognitivism in Wittgenstein’s later writings. The argument proceeds on the basis of two main claims. First, Wittgenstein’s mature philosophy, as expressed in his _Philosophical Investigations_, clearly favours cognitivism over non-cognitivism with regard to certain linguistic fact…Read more
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701A Confucian Algorithm for Autonomous VehiclesScience and Engineering Ethics 30 (52): 1-22. 2024.Any moral algorithm for autonomous vehicles must provide a practical solution to moral problems of the trolley type, in which all possible courses of action will result in damage, injury, or death. This article discusses a hitherto neglected variety of this type of problem, based on a recent psychological study whose results are reported here. It argues that the most adequate solution to this problem will be achieved by a moral algorithm that is based on Confucian ethics. In addition to this phi…Read more
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925Nietzsche and the MachinesThe Philosophers' Magazine 93 12-15. 2021.Sebastian Sunday Grève calls on us to decide what kind of life with machines we want.
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1392Artificial Forms of LifePhilosophies 8 (5). 2023.The logical problem of artificial intelligence—the question of whether the notion sometimes referred to as ‘strong’ AI is self-contradictory—is, essentially, the question of whether an artificial form of life is possible. This question has an immediately paradoxical character, which can be made explicit if we recast it (in terms that would ordinarily seem to be implied by it) as the question of whether an unnatural form of nature is possible. The present paper seeks to explain this paradoxical k…Read more
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388Entertaining UnhappinessIn Craig Fox & Britt Harrison (eds.), Philosophy of Film Without Theory, Palgrave-macmillan. 2023.This essay sets out reflections on happiness that, it is argued, can be drawn from the 2013 film Blue Jasmine. In doing so, it seeks to demonstrate a certain epistemic potential of sound film, specifically, in the present case, a philosophical and psychological potential. It is argued that this kind of potential resides in a filmmaker’s ability to realistically represent aspects of the world that can otherwise rarely, if ever, be experienced so reflectively.
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693Intuitive SkillPhilosophia 51 (3): 1677-1700. 2023.This article presents a theory of intuitive skill in terms of three constitutive elements: getting things right intuitively, not getting things wrong intuitively, and sceptical ability. The theory draws on work from a range of psychological approaches to intuition and expertise in various domains, including arts, business, science, and sport. It provides a general framework that will help to further integrate research on these topics, for example building bridges between practical and theoretica…Read more
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1130Lunacy and Scepticism: Notes on the Logic of Doubt Concerning the Existence of an External WorldTopoi 41 (5): 1023-1031. 2022.This article develops a logical (or semantic) response to scepticism about the existence of an external world. Specifically, it is argued that any doubt about the existence of an external world can be proved to be false, but whatever appears to be doubt about the existence of an external world that _cannot_ be proved to be false is nonsense, insofar as it must rely on the assertion of something that is logically impossible. The article further suggests that both G. E. Moore and Ludwig Wittgenste…Read more
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1658Philosophy and Common Sense 3: Philosophy as a ScienceThe Philosophers' Magazine 97 30-35. 2022.Timothy Williamson and Sebastian Sunday-Grève discuss the question of where philosophy starts, and the idea of philosophy as a non-natural science.
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989Philosophy and Common Sense 2: Cultivating CuriosityThe Philosophers' Magazine 96 24-30. 2022.Sebastian Sunday-Grève and Timothy Williamson discuss the relationship between curiosity and common sense.
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1401Philosophy and Common Sense I: What Is Common Sense?The Philosophers' Magazine 95 24-30. 2021.Sebastian Sunday-Grève and Timothy Williamson discuss the question of where philosophy starts and the idea of philosophy as a non-natural science.
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3508Logic and Philosophy of Logic in WittgensteinAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 96 (1): 168-182. 2018.This essay discusses Wittgenstein's conception of logic, early and late, and some of the types of logical system that he constructed. The essay shows that the common view according to which Wittgenstein had stopped engaging in logic as a philosophical discipline by the time of writing Philosophical Investigations is mistaken. It is argued that, on the contrary, logic continued to figure at the very heart of later Wittgenstein's philosophy; and that Wittgenstein's mature philosophy of logic conta…Read more
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2853The Importance of Understanding Each Other in PhilosophyPhilosophy 90 (2): 213-239. 2015.What is philosophy? How is it possible? This essay constitutes an attempt to contribute to a better understanding of what might be a good answer to either of these questions by reflecting on one particular characteristic of philosophy, specifically as it presents itself in the philosophical practice of Socrates, Plato and Wittgenstein. Throughout this essay, I conduct the systematic discussion of my topic in parallel lines with the historico-methodological comparison of my three main authors. Fi…Read more
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970LogicIn Anat Matar (ed.), Understanding Wittgenstein, Understanding Modernism, Bloomsbury. pp. 205-216. 2017.Logic played an important role in Wittgenstein’s work over the entire period of his philosophizing, from both the point of view of the philosopher of logic and that of the logician. Besides logical analysis, there is another kind of logical activity that characterizes Wittgenstein’s philosophical work after a certain point during his experience as a soldier and, later, as an officer in the First World War – if not earlier. This other kind of logical activity has to do with what appears to be the…Read more
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1375Wittgenstein and the Creativity of Language (edited book)Palgrave-Macmillan. 2016.This volume is the first to focus on a particular complex of questions that have troubled Wittgenstein scholarship since its very beginnings. The authors re-examine Wittgenstein’s fundamental insights into the workings of human linguistic behaviour, its creative extensions and its philosophical capabilities, as well as his creative use of language. It offers insight into a variety of topics including painting, politics, literature, poetry, literary theory, mathematics, philosophy of language, ae…Read more
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1420The Good, the Bad and the Creative: Language in Wittgenstein's PhilosophyIn Sebastian Sunday-Grève & Jakub Mácha (eds.), Wittgenstein and the Creativity of Language, Palgrave-macmillan. pp. 3-25. 2016.This introductory chapter presents the reader with various ways of approaching the topic ‘Wittgenstein and the creativity of language’. It is argued that any serious account of the questions arising from this joint consideration of, on the one hand, this great genius of philosophy and, on the other, the varieties of speech, text, action and beauty which go under the heading ‘the creativity of language’ will have to appreciate the potential of both, in terms of breadth as well as depth. First, th…Read more
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1564Wittgenstein on Philosophy, Objectivity, and Meaning (edited book)Cambridge University Press. 2019.This volume of new essays presents groundbreaking interpretations of some of the most central themes of Wittgenstein's philosophy. A distinguished group of contributors demonstrates how Wittgenstein's thought can fruitfully be applied to contemporary debates in epistemology, metaphilosophy and philosophy of language. The volume combines historical and systematic approaches to Wittgensteinian methods and perspectives, with essays providing detailed analysis that will be accessible to students as …Read more
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2421Wittgenstein on Gödelian 'Incompleteness', Proofs and Mathematical Practice: Reading Remarks on the Foundations of Mathematics, Part I, Appendix III, CarefullyIn Sebastian Sunday-Grève & Jakub Mácha (eds.), Wittgenstein and the Creativity of Language, Palgrave-macmillan. pp. 76-116. 2016.We argue that Wittgenstein’s philosophical perspective on Gödel’s most famous theorem is even more radical than has commonly been assumed. Wittgenstein shows in detail that there is no way that the Gödelian construct of a string of signs could be assigned a useful function within (ordinary) mathematics. — The focus is on Appendix III to Part I of Remarks on the Foundations of Mathematics. The present reading highlights the exceptional importance of this particular set of remarks and, more specif…Read more
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| Philosophy of Artificial Intelligence |
| Epistemology |
| Philosophy of Language |
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Socrates |
| Ludwig Wittgenstein |
PhilPapers Editorships
| Intuition |
| Epistemology of Intuition |
| Intuition, Misc |
| The Nature of Intuition |