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15Paley’s PrincipleInformal Logic 45 (4): 544-559. 2025.William Paley s'oppose aux arguments sceptiques de David Hume contre le témoignage de miracle en affirmant ce qui ressemble à un principe méthodologique d'argumentation: ne rejeter un témoignage partagé provenant de multiples sources crédibles que si une explication alternative raisonnable du témoignage est disponible. Appelons ça le Principe de Paley. D’autres auteurs, de Plutarque à Richard Dawkins, ont soit directement soutenu Paley dans cette affirmation, soit proposé des réflexions similair…Read more
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30Non‐Sentential Assertions and the Dependence Thesis of Word MeaningMind and Language 14 (4): 424-440. 2002.To assert is to utter a sentence under certain conventions, claims Michael Dummett. This view runs afoul of empirical evidence indicating the widespread assertoric use of non‐elliptical words and phrases. Dummett also advances two theses apparently related to his sentence conventionalism: that word meaning depends on sentence meaning, and that language is (in some sense) prior to thought. I argue that these latter two theses are independent of the empirically dubious Sentential Thesis. Plausibly…Read more
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89Book reviews (review)The European Legacy 2 (8): 1405-1457. 1997.The Plight of Emulation: Ernest Meissonier and French Salon Painting. By Marc J. Gotlieb (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1996) 255 pages, $45.00, £33.50 cloth. Charles Darwin's The Origin of Species: New Interdisciplinary Essays. By David Amigoni and Jeff Wallace (eds.) (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1995) xii + 211 pp., £35.00 cloth, £12.99 paper. Gestalt Psychology in German Culture 1890–1967. Holism and the Quest for Objectivity. By Mitchell G. Ash (Cambridge: Cambrid…Read more
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115Searle rediscovers what was not lostDialogue 37 (1): 117-130. 1998.We shall see that both these projects are deeply misguided. The first suffers from Searle’s misrepresentation, en masse and individually, of the various materialist theories. To show this, I will focus on the basic claims of token identity specifically, and draw out the inaccuracy of Searle’s straw materialism. This is a shortcut; by showing one conjunct to be false, we may show the conjunction of Searle’s summaries to be false. And, after all, token identity is the most widely held current view…Read more
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1229Bald-faced bullshit and authoritarian political speech: Making sense of Johnson and TrumpIn Laurence R. Horn (ed.), From lying to perjury: linguistic and legal perspective on lies and other falsehoods, De Gruyter Mouton. pp. 165-194. 2022.Donald Trump and Boris Johnson are notoriously uninterested in truthtelling. They also often appear uninterested even in constructing plausible falsehoods. What stands out above all is the brazenness and frequency with which they repeat known falsehoods. In spite of this, they are not always greeted with incredulity. Indeed, Republicans continue to express trust in Donald Trump in remarkable numbers. The only way to properly make sense of what Trump and Johnson are doing, we argue, is to give a …Read more
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107Knowing Our Limits. By NathanBallantyne. New York: Oxford University Press, 2019. Pp. xi + 326Metaphilosophy 52 (2): 325-331. 2021.Metaphilosophy, EarlyView.
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79Peer Idealization and Internal Examples in the Epistemology of DisagreementDialogue 59 (1): 69-79. 2020.L’épistémologie du désaccord s’est développée autour d’une notion idéalisée de pairs épistémiques. L’analyse d’exemples dans la littérature a quelque peu enraciné cette idéalisation, surtout lorsque les exemples étudiés sont des désaccords tirés du canon philosophique contemporain et qu’ils opposent des interlocuteurs identifiés. Il est difficile, pour des raisons socio-professionnelles, de souligner les manières ordinaires par lesquelles ces collègues disciplinaires peuvent se tromper. Il est p…Read more
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92The suggested citation for this white paper is: University of Waterloo Working Group on Bibliometrics, Winter 2016. White Paper: Measuring Research Outputs through Bibliometrics, Waterloo, Ontario: University of Waterloo.
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2Utopian Communism and Political Thought in Early Modern EnglandUtopian Studies 2 (1): 202-204. 1991.
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Philosophical Applications of Semantic Anti-RealismDissertation, The University of Western Ontario (Canada). 1998.This dissertation comprises four papers , each of which focuses on some aspect or application of the philosophical view known as semantic anti-realism, developed mainly by Michael Dummett. According to this view, reality is essentially knowable; as a corollary of this, the notion of truth is to be understood in terms of the availability of evidence. Chapter One considers a proposal for an anti-realist truth predicate advanced by Crispin Wright. I examine and reject various objections to Wright's…Read more
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44Virtuous discourse: sensibility and community in late eighteenth-century ScotlandHistory of European Ideas 12 (5): 685-687. 1990.
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50Russell on PastnessDialogue 57-59. 1991.In "On the Experience of Time", Russell claims that a knowledge of an objective earlier/later relation cannot establish our original awareness of "pastness". He proposes a special knowledge of pastness derived from introspection upon memory. My paper summarizes both accounts, examining Russell's rejection of the former. I conclude that the objective relation could indeed form the epistemic basis of pastness. Thus, for Russell's purposes, the psychological account is unnecessary
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60Indeterminacy and realismIn Don Ross, Andrew Brook & David Thompson (eds.), Dennett’s Philosophy: A Comprehensive Assessment, Mit Press. pp. 77--94. 2000.This article considers a Quine-Dennett style of argument from the indeterminacy of intentional content against the reducibility of mental states to neurological states. The most compelling version of such an argument, I suggest, is one that exploits a semantic anti-realist notion of truth; this holds out the promise of a relatively sophisticated story about the respects in which mental state attributions may be true or false of physical systems, without those states themselves being physical st…Read more
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158Analogues of knowabilityAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 81 (4). 2003.An interesting recent reply to the Paradox of Knowability is Neil Tennant's proposal: to restrict the anti-realist's knowability thesis to truths the knowing of which is logically consistent. However, this proposal is egregiously ad hoc unless motivated by something other than the wish to save anti-realism from embarrassment. We examine Tennant's argument that his restriction is motivated by parallel considerations in cases that are neutral with respect to debates about realism. We conclude that…Read more
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107Cynical Assertion: Convention, Pragmatics, and Saying "Uncle"American Philosophical Quarterly 40 (3): 241-248. 2003.This paper begins by exploring a subspecies of assertion. Under some circumstances an utterance intuitively counts as an assertion, even though it is Cynical: that is, it is insincere, and made without the reasonable expectation of even appearing sincere to its audience. The paper explores the contextual and cognitive workings of Cynical assertion – directly, in part, but also by comparison with superficially similar but non-assertoric utterances, namely, those made under duress. Finally, the pa…Read more
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1354Noninferentialism and testimonial belief fixationEpisteme 10 (1): 73-85. 2013.An influential view in the epistemology of testimony is that typical or paradigmatic beliefs formed through testimonial uptake are noninferential. Some epistemologists in particular defend a causal version of this view: that beliefs formed from testimony (BFT) are generated by noninferential processes. This view is implausible, however. It tends to be elaborated in terms that do not really bear it out – e.g. that BFT is fixed directly, immediately, unconsciously or automatically. Nor is causal n…Read more
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104Assertion and capitulationPacific Philosophical Quarterly 91 (3): 352-368. 2010.The context or manner of an utterance can alter or nullify the speech-act that would normally be performed by utterances of that sort. Coercive contexts have this effect on some kinds of seeming assertions: they end up being non-assertoric, and are merely capitulations. An earlier version of this view is clarified, defended, and extended partly in response to a useful critique by Roy Sorensen. I examine some complications that arise regarding resistance to speaking under coercion when ideologica…Read more
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81Non-sentential assertions and the dependence thesis of word meaningMind and Language 14 (4). 1999.To assert is to utter a sentence under certain conventions, claims Michael Dummett. This view runs afoul of empirical evidence indicating the widespread assertoric use of non‐elliptical words and phrases. Dummett also advances two theses apparently related to his sentence conventionalism: that word meaning depends on sentence meaning, and that language is (in some sense) prior to thought. I argue that these latter two theses are independent of the empirically dubious Sentential Thesis. Plausibly…Read more
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2421Critical Thinking Education and DebiasingInformal Logic 34 (4): 341-363. 2014.There are empirical grounds to doubt the effectiveness of a common and intuitive approach to teaching debiasing strategies in critical thinking courses. We summarize some of the grounds before suggesting a broader taxonomy of debiasing strategies. This four-level taxonomy enables a useful diagnosis of biasing factors and situations, and illuminates more strategies for more effective bias mitigation located in the shaping of situational factors and reasoning infrastructure—sometimes called “nudge…Read more
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126The Scope of Debiasing in the ClassroomTopoi 37 (1): 93-102. 2018.Critical thinking is often taught with some emphasis on categories and operations of cognitive biases. The underlying thought is that knowledge of biases equips students to reduce them. The empirical evidence, however, doesn’t provide much support for this thought. We have previously argued that the emphasis on debiasing in critical thinking education is worth preserving, but in light of a more explicit and broader conception of debiasing. We now argue that this broader conception of debiasing s…Read more
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Idealized Psychology and Doxastic LogicThe Baltic International Yearbook of Cognition, Logic and Communication 1. 2005.
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118Are Names Ambiguous?ProtoSociology 21 148-159. 2005.It is widely held that proper names are ambiguous in some sense, a view commonly associated with the theory that names are, when suitably idealized, semantically “rigid designators”. In this brief paper I suggest that, while some refinement of the concept of a name is surely appropriate, proper names do not very clearly meet the standards normally used to determine ambiguity. There is reason to regard shared names as semantically univocal, including some evidence from development linguistics to …Read more
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209Oral History and The Epistemology of TestimonySocial Epistemology 30 (1): 45-66. 2016.Social epistemology has paid little attention to oral historiography as a source of expert insight into the credibility of testimony. One extant suggestion, however, is that oral historians treat testimony with a default trust reflecting a standing warrant for accepting testimony. The view that there is such a standing warrant is sometimes known as the Acceptance Principle for Testimony. I argue that the practices of oral historians do not count in support of APT, all in all. Experts have common…Read more
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University of WaterlooDepartment of Philosophy
Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
Areas of Interest
| Epistemology |
| Philosophy of Language |
| Philosophy of Mind |