History of Philosophy

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Journal Articles

  1. (With M. Duncombe) "Dialectic and logic in Aristotle and his tradition"History and Philosophy of Logic 37, 1-8, 2016.

  2. "The formal and the formalized: the cases of syllogistic and supposition theory"Kriterion 131, 253-270, 2015. 

  3. “The role of ‘denotatur’ in Ockham’s theory of supposition”Vivarium 51, 352-370, 2013.

  4. “Ockham on supposition theory, mental language, and angelic communication”American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 86(3), 415-434, 2012 (special issue on Ockham).

  5. “Form and matter in later Latin medieval logic: the cases of suppositio and consequentiaJournal of the History of Philosophy 50(3), 339-364, 2012.

  6. “Reassessing logical hylomorphism and the demarcation of logical constants”Synthese 185, 387-410, 2012.

  7. (With E. Andrade-Lotero) Validity, the squeezing argument and alternative semantic systems: the case of Aristotelian syllogistic”Journal of Philosophical Logic 41, 387-418, 2012.

  8. “Medieval obligationes as a theory of discursive commitment management”Vivarium 49 (1-3), pp. 240-257, 2011.

  9. “The different ways in which logic is (said to be) formal. History and Philosophy of Logic 32, pp. 303-332, 2011.

  10. “Lessons on truth from medieval solutions to the Liar paradox”Philosophical Quarterly 61, pp. 58-78, 2011.

  11. “‘He doesn’twant to prove this or that’ – On the very young WittgensteinPhilosophical Books 51(2), pp. 102-116, 2010.

  12. “Lessons on sentential meaning from medieval solutions to the Liar paradox”Philosophical Quarterly 59, pp. 682-704, 2009.

  13. “An intensional interpretation of Ockham’s theory of supposition”Journal of the History of Philosophy 46(3), pp. 365-394, 2008.

  14. (With S. Read) Insolubilia and the fallacy secundum quid et simpliciterVivarium 46(2), pp. 175-191, 2008.

  15. “A comparative taxonomy of medieval and modern approaches to Liar sentences”History and Philosophy of Logic 29(3), pp. 227 – 261, 2008.

  16. “Theory of Supposition vs. Theory of Fallacies in Ockham”Vivarium 45(2-3), pp. 343-359, 2007.

  17. Ralph Strode’s obligationes: the return of consistency and the epistemic turn”Vivarium 44(2-3), pp. 338-374, 2006.

  18. “Roger Swyneshed’s obligationes: a logical game of inference recognition?”Synthese 151(1), pp. 127-155, 2006.

  19. “Medieval Obligationes as Logical Games of Consistency Maintenance”Synthese 145(3), 2005, pp. 371-395, 2005.

  20. “Buridan’s consequentia: consequence and inference within a token-based semantics”History and Philosophy of Logic 26(4), 2005, pp. 277-297, 2005.

  21. “The Buridanian account of inferential relations between doubly-quantified propositions: a proof of soundness”History and Philosophy of Logic 25(3), 2004, pp. 215-234, 2004.

Chapters in Volumes

  1. Ockham’s supposition theory as formal semantics”. In Christoph Kann, Benedikt Loewe, Christian Rode, Sara L. Uckelman (eds.), Modern Views of Medieval Logic. Recherches de Theologie et Philosophie Médiévales—Bibliotheca. Peeters Publishers, 2018.

  2. "Formal methods in history of philosophy". In S.O. Hansson & V.F. Hendricks (eds.), Introduction to Formal Philosophy. Berlin, Springer, 2018.

  3. (With L. Geerdink) "The dissonant origins of analytic philosophy: common sense in philosophical methodology". In S. Lapointe and C. Pincock (eds.), Innovations in the History of Analytical Philosophy. London, Palgrave Macmillan, 2017, 69-102.

  4. "The syllogism as defined by Aristotle, Ockham, and Buridan". In J. Pelletier and M. Roques, The Language of Thought in Late Medieval Philosophy. Berlin, Springer, 2017.

  5. (With B. Bosman) "Formal, material, and hybrid grounding for consequence: Peter Abelard and John Buridan". In C. Grellard (ed.), Mélanges offerts à Joël Biard. Paris, Vrin, 229-241, 2017.  

  6. "The form of a syllogism: mood or figure?" In L. Cesalli, F. Goubier, A. De Libera (eds.), Formal Approaches and Natural Language in Medieval Logic. Turnhout, Brepols, 117-132, 2017.

  7. (With S. Uckelman) "Obligationes". In C. Dutilh Novaes and S. Read (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Medieval Logic. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 370-395, 2016.

  8. "Conceptual genealogy for analytic philosophy". In J. Bell, A. Cutrofello, P.M. Livingston (eds.), Beyond the Analytic-Continental Divide: Pluralist Philosophy in the Twenty-First Century (Routledge Studies in Contemporary Philosophy), 2015.

  9. (With J. Spruyt) "Those funny words: medieval theories of syncategorematic terms". In M. Cameron and R. Stainton (eds.), Linguistic Content: New Essays on the History of Philosophy of Language. Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2015, 100-120.

  10. “The Ockham-Burley dispute”. In A. Conti (ed.), A Companion to Walter Burley. Leiden, Brill, 2013, 49-86.

  11. "Medieval Theories of Consequence". In E. Zalta (ed.), Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2012.

  12. Lessons in philosophy of logic from medieval obligationes”. In G. Restall and G. Russell (eds.), New Waves in Philosophical Logic. New York, Palgrave Macmillan, 2012, 142-168 (pre-print version). 

  13. "A medieval solution to the puzzle of empty names". In C. Dutilh Novaes and O. Hjortland (eds.), Insolubles and Consequences -- Essays in Honour of Stephen Read. London, College Publications, 2012, 73-92.

  14. “Medieval Theories of Quantification”. In H. Lagerlund (ed.), Encyclopedia of Medieval Philosophy. Berlin, Springer, 2011, 1093-1096.

  15. “Medieval Theories of Truth”. In H. Lagerlund (ed.), Encyclopedia of Medieval Philosophy. Berlin, Springer, 2011, 1340-1347.

  16. “Medieval Theories of Supposition”. In H. Lagerlund (ed.), Encyclopedia of Medieval Philosophy. Berlin, Springer, 2011, 1229-1236.

  17. "Ockham on supposition and mental language". In G. Klima and A. Hall (eds.), Knowledge, Mental Language, and Free Will. Newcastle upon Tyne, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2011, pp. 47-64.

  18. “Judgments, contents and their representations”. In G. Primiero & S. Rahman (eds.), Acts of Knowledge: History, Philosophy and Logic. London, College Publications, pp. 183-206, 2009.

  19. “Medieval obligationes as a regimentation of ‘the game of giving and asking for reasons’”. In M. Palis (ed.), LOGICA Yearbook 2008. London, College Publications, 2009.

  20. “Logic in the 14th century after Ockham”. In D. Gabbay and J. Woods (eds.), The Handbook of the History of Logic, vol 2. Amsterdam, Elsevier, pp. 433-504, 2008.

  21. “Tarski’s hidden theory of meaning”. In S. Rahman, T. Tulenheimo & E. Genot (eds.), Unity, Truth and the Liar – The modern relevance of medieval solutions to Semantic paradoxes. Berlin, Springer, pp. 41-63, 2008.

  22. “In search of the intuitive notion of logical consequence”LOGICA Yearbook 2004, Prague, Filosofia, 2005, pp. 109-123, 2005.

  23. “A medieval reformulation of the de dicto / de re distinction”LOGICA Yearbook 2003, Prague, Filosofia, 2004, pp. 111- 124, 2004.