Jeremy Fantl
University of Calgary
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Metaphysica | 2016
Jeremy Fantl
Abstract Lady Mary Shepherd’s critique of Hume’s account of causation, his worries about knowledge of matters of fact, and the contention that it is possible for the course of nature to spontaneously change relies primarily on three premises, two of which – that objects are merely bundles of qualities and that the qualities of an object are individuated by the causal powers contributed by those qualities – anticipate contemporary metaphysical views in ways that she should be getting credit for. The remaining premise – that it is impossible for an object to begin to exist uncaused – seems more old fashioned. I argue that Shepherd can do without her old-fashioned premise and that she provides the materials for arguing that her remaining premises demonstrate a stronger anti-Humeanism than is maintained even by the contemporary representatives of those views, even though she may have to concede more to Humeanism than she would like.
Archive | 2013
Matthew McGrath; Jeremy Fantl
In Sect. 1 of this chapter, Matthew McGrath examines Sosa’s work on the nature of truth. Sosa’s chief purpose is to determine what sort of theory of truth is appropriate for “truth-centered epistemology” – an epistemology that takes truth to be the goal of inquiry and which explains key epistemic notions in terms of truth. While Sosa refutes arguments from Putnam and Davidson against the correspondence theory, he is hesitant to endorse it because he doubts we have a clear enough grasp of what correspondence amounts to and what the correspondents are. A truth-centered epistemologist, however, is free to work with minimalism about truth and Moorean primitivism. Part of Sosa’s case for primitivism, and against minimalism, involves a comparison with Moore’s account of goodness. Here McGrath notes an important dissimilarity between the two (i.e., susceptibility to “open-question” arguments) and suggests that this may be reason to prefer minimalism to primitivism.
Philosophy Compass | 2008
Jeremy Fantl
Archive | 2009
Jeremy Fantl; Matthew McGrath
The Philosophical Review | 2002
Jeremy Fantl; Matthew McGrath
Philosophy and Phenomenological Research | 2007
Jeremy Fantl; Matthew McGrath
Philosophical Studies | 2009
Jeremy Fantl; Matthew McGrath
Pacific Philosophical Quarterly | 2006
Jeremy Fantl
Philosophical Studies | 2011
Jeremy Fantl
Archive | 2012
Jeremy Fantl; Matthew McGrath