•  105
    From Ordinary Language to Definition in Kant and Bolzano
    Grazer Philosophische Studien 85 (1): 131-149. 2012.
    In this paper I discuss Kant's and Bolzano's differing perspectives on ordinary natural language. I argue that Kant does not see ordinary language as providing semantically organized content and that, as a result, Kant does not believe that ordinary language is sufficiently well-developed to support philosophical analysis and definition. By contrast, for Bolzano, the content given in ordinary language are richly structured entities he calls 'propositions in themselves'. This contrast in views is…Read more
  •  126
    Composition as Trans-Scalar Identity
    with Alexander Schumm and Gualtiero Piccinini
    Acta Analytica 41 (2): 321-346. 2026.
    We define mereologically invariant composition as the relation between a whole object and its parts when the object retains the same parts during a time interval. We argue that mereologically invariant composition is identity between a whole and its parts taken collectively. Our reason is that parts and wholes are equivalent measurements of a portion of reality at different scales in the precise sense employed by measurement theory. The purpose of these scales is the numerical representation of …Read more