- School of Historical and Philosophical Studies - Research Publications
School of Historical and Philosophical Studies - Research Publications
Permanent URI for this collection
13 results
Filters
Reset filtersSettings
Statistics
Citations
Search Results
Now showing
1 - 10 of 13
-
ItemConditionals: A Debate with JacksonPriest, G (Oxford University PressOxford, 2010-05-01)Abstract This chapter presents a number of concerns about Jackson's approach to conditionals. The first section discusses the view defended by Frank Jackson in his book Conditionals; it describes his account and notes some of its shortcomings. There are good reasons for doing this. Views of the kind defended there are, if not orthodox, still very common. And Jackson defends the view in, arguably, its most cogent form. The second section sketches a rather different account, which avoids these shortcomings. It proposes a general framework for an account of conditionals, one that leaves plenty of parameters to be adjusted for fine tuning.
-
ItemThe paradoxes of denotationPRIEST, G (CSLI Publications, 2006)
-
ItemHopes Fade For Saving TruthPriest, G (CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS, 2010-01)
-
ItemInclosures, Vagueness, and Self-ReferencePriest, G (University of Notre Dame, 2010-01-01)In this paper, I start by showing that sorites paradoxes are inclosure paradoxes. That is, they fit the Inclosure Scheme which characterizes the paradoxes of self-reference. Given that sorites and self-referential paradoxes are of the same kind, they should have the same kind of solution. The rest of the paper investigates what a dialetheic solution to sorites paradoxes is like, connections with a dialetheic solution to the self-referential paradoxes, and related issues— especially so called “higher order” vagueness.
-
ItemNEIGHBORHOOD SEMANTICS FOR INTENTIONAL OPERATORSPriest, G (CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS, 2009-06)
-
ItemTHE STRUCTURE OF EMPTINESSPriest, G (UNIV HAWAII PRESS, 2009-10)The view that everything is empty (śūnya) is a central metaphysical plank of Mahāyāna Buddhism. It has often been the focus of objections. Perhaps the most important of these is that it in effect entails a nihilism: nothing exists. This objection, in turn, is denied by Mahāyāna theorists, such as Nāgārjuna. One of the things that makes the debate difficult is that the precise import of the view that everything is empty is unclear. The object of this essay is to put the debate in a new light. It does so by proposing a mathematical characterization of Emptiness—that is, the totality of empty things—showing that, whatever it is, it has a definite structure and is not, therefore, to be identified with nothingness.
-
ItemMANY-VALUED MODAL LOGICS: A SIMPLE APPROACHPriest, G (CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS, 2008-08)
-
ItemTHE CLOSING OF THE MIND: HOW THE PARTICULAR QUANTIFIER BECAME EXISTENTIALLY LOADED BEHIND OUR BACKSPriest, G (CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS, 2008-06)The paper argues that the view that the particular quantifier is ‘existentially loaded’ is a relatively new one historically and that it has become entrenched in modern philosophical logic for less than happy reasons.
-
ItemSpiking the field-artilleryPRIEST, GG ; BEALL, JC ; ARMOUR-GARB, B (Oxford University Press, 2005)
-
ItemNon-Transitive IdentityPriest, G (Oxford University PressOxford, 2010-05-01)Abstract This chapter defines a notion of identity in the second-order paraconsistent logic LP. The notion does not have the properties of transitivity or substitutivity, but these may be regained in consistent contexts. The chapter then discusses applications of this notion of identity, especially to entities involved in change. Soritical changes come in for special consideration.