The paper aims to disarm arguments, prevalent in diverse philosophical contexts, that deny the legitimacy of attributions of propositional attitudes on the grounds that the putative subject lacks one or more of the requite concepts. Its strategy is to offer and defend an extremely minimal account on concept possession. The agenda of the paper broadens into a defence of the thesis that concepts are a linguistic epiphenomenon: talk about them emerges as the result of certain contingently available and pleonastic ways of talking about propositional attitudes
In this paper I defend the claim that concepts are not public. I argue that two of the main constrai...
According to the classical account, propositions are sui generis, abstract, intrinsically-representa...
This article offers a defense of the theoretical foundations of Conceptual History (Begriffsgeschich...
(This paper responds to some criticisms made by Robert J. Stainton of an earlier-written but later-p...
In academic philosophy and in ordinary life, it is often difficult to tell whether two people are re...
Abstract: A certain ‘pragmatist ’ view of concept possession has defined the mainstream of Anglophon...
“Since the term was coined by W. B. Gallie, the idea of essentially contested concepts has been used...
This article deals with the cognitive relationship between a speaker and her internal grammar. In pa...
I explore and defend the distinction between an abstract concept and conceptions of that concept—dif...
This paper deals with the cognitive relationship between a speaker and her internal grammar. In part...
I defend the Fregean model of propositions: propositions are (a) the referents of that-clauses and (...
Much recent work on concepts has been inspired by and is developed within the bounds of the represen...
This thesis assesses a type of transcendental argument known as a 'concept- directed transcendental ...
The paper is a critical examination of Peacocke\u27s pioneering work on concepts as grounding the po...
In this paper I defend the claim that concepts are not public. I argue that two of the main constrai...
In this paper I defend the claim that concepts are not public. I argue that two of the main constrai...
According to the classical account, propositions are sui generis, abstract, intrinsically-representa...
This article offers a defense of the theoretical foundations of Conceptual History (Begriffsgeschich...
(This paper responds to some criticisms made by Robert J. Stainton of an earlier-written but later-p...
In academic philosophy and in ordinary life, it is often difficult to tell whether two people are re...
Abstract: A certain ‘pragmatist ’ view of concept possession has defined the mainstream of Anglophon...
“Since the term was coined by W. B. Gallie, the idea of essentially contested concepts has been used...
This article deals with the cognitive relationship between a speaker and her internal grammar. In pa...
I explore and defend the distinction between an abstract concept and conceptions of that concept—dif...
This paper deals with the cognitive relationship between a speaker and her internal grammar. In part...
I defend the Fregean model of propositions: propositions are (a) the referents of that-clauses and (...
Much recent work on concepts has been inspired by and is developed within the bounds of the represen...
This thesis assesses a type of transcendental argument known as a 'concept- directed transcendental ...
The paper is a critical examination of Peacocke\u27s pioneering work on concepts as grounding the po...
In this paper I defend the claim that concepts are not public. I argue that two of the main constrai...
In this paper I defend the claim that concepts are not public. I argue that two of the main constrai...
According to the classical account, propositions are sui generis, abstract, intrinsically-representa...
This article offers a defense of the theoretical foundations of Conceptual History (Begriffsgeschich...