JAMES VAN CLEVE
vancleve@usc.edu
October 13, 2023 [CV PDF]
Addresses
School of Philosophy Home: Summer:
University of Southern California 458 Stanford Drive 98 Sefton Drive
Los Angeles, CA 90089 Claremont, CA 91711 Cranston, RI 02905
213-740-4084 909-625-5473 401-941-6513
Education
B.A., The University of Iowa, 1969
M.A., The University of Rochester, 1972
Ph.D., The University of Rochester, 1974
(Dissertation Title: The Role of the Given in Empirical Knowledge)
Professional Appointments
University of Southern California: Professor of Philosophy, beginning Fall 2005.
Visiting Professor of Philosophy, 2002-2003, Spring 2004, and Spring 2005.
Brown University: Adjunct Professor, 2005-2022
Brown University: Professor of Philosophy, 1987-2005.
Chair, Department of Philosophy, 1986-1991 and 1999-2003.
Associate Professor, 1979-87; Assistant Professor, 1973-1979.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology: Visiting Professor, Fall 2018; Spring 2021
University of Iowa: Visiting Professor of Philosophy, Spring 2002.
Duke University: Visiting Professor of Philosophy, Spring 1989, Fall 1991, and
Spring 1993.
Jadavpur University (Calcutta, India): Fulbright Visiting Professor, July 1980-
February 1981.
Honors and Awards
Woodrow Wilson Dissertation Fellowship, 1972-73.
Brown University Summer Stipend for Faculty Research, 1974.
Brown University Wriston Fellowship (“to recognize significant previous
accomplishments in innovative teaching or curricular improvement”), 1978.
Fulbright Award to Lecture in India, July 1980 through January 1981.
American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship, February 1981 through July
1981.
Wayland Collegium Incentive Grant (to develop the course “Science, Perception, and
Reality”), 1984.
National Humanities Center Fellowship, 1990-91.
National Endowment for the Humanities grant to teach a Summer Seminar for
College Teachers during July and August of 2000. Topic: Thomas Reid on
Perception, Knowledge, and Action.
National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship, 2011-12
National Humanities Center Fellowship, 2011-12
Elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, April 2023
Publications
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- Books:
- The Philosophy of Right and Left: Incongruent Counterparts and the Nature of
Space, an anthology co-edited with Robert Frederick (Dordrecht, Holland: Kluwer
Academic Publishers, 1991). Contains an introduction by each editor. - Problems from Kant (New York: Oxford University Press, 1999).
- Problems from Reid (New York: Oxford University Press, 2015).
- The Philosophy of Right and Left: Incongruent Counterparts and the Nature of
- Books:
-
- Articles:
- “Four Recent Interpretations of Kant’s Second Analogy,” Kant-Studien, 64 (1973),
71-87.
Reprinted in Immanuel Kant (a volume in the International Library of Critical
Essays in the History of Philosophy), edited by H. Klemme and M. Kuehn
(Aldershot, UK: Ashgate Publishing Company, 1998). - “Probability and Certainty: A Re-examination of the Lewis-Reichenbach Debate,”
Philosophical Studies, 32 (1977), 323-34. - “Substance, Matter, and Kant’s First Analogy,” Kant-Studien, 70 (1979), 149- 61.
- “Foundationalism, Epistemic Principles, and the Cartesian Circle,” The
Philosophical Review, 88 (1979), 55-91.
Reprinted in Eternal Truths and the Cartesian Circle, edited by Willis Doney
(New York: Garland Publishing Company, Inc., 1987).
Also reprinted in:
Knowledge and Justification (Volume 9 in the International Research Library of
Philosophy), edited by E. Sosa (Aldershot, UK: Ashgate Publishing Company,
1994).
Oxford Readings in Philosophy: Descartes, edited by John Cottingham (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1998).
The Blackwell Reader in Epistemology, edited by J. Kim and E. Sosa (Oxford:
Blackwell, 1999).
Contemporary Epistemology (Budapest: Osiris Publishing House, 1999),
translated into Hungarian. - “C.I. Lewis’s Defense of Phenomenalism,” Philosophy and Phenomenological
Research, 41 (1981), 325-32. - “Reflections on Kant’s Second Antinomy,” Synthese, 47 (1981), 481-94.
- “Conceivability and the Cartesian Argument for Dualism,” Pacific Philosophical
Quarterly 64 (1983), 35-45.
Reprinted in Rene Descartes, Volume I of Essays on Early Modern Philosophy,
edited by Vere Chappell (New York: Garland Publishing Co, 1992).
Also reprinted in The Way Things Are: Basic Readings in Metaphysics, edited by
W. R. Carter (Boston: McGraw-Hill, 1998). - “Another Volley at Kant’s Reply to Hume,” in Kant on Causality, Freedom, and
Objectivity, edited by William L. Harper and Ralf Meerbote (Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Press, 1984), pp. 42-57. - “Reliability, Justification, and the Problem of Induction,” Midwest Studies in
Philosophy, Vol. 9, edited by Peter A French, Theodore E. Uehling, Jr., and
Howard K. Wettstein (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1984), pp.
555-67.
Reprinted in Argument and Analysis, edited by Martin Curd (St. Paul: West
Publishing Co., 1992). - “Three Versions of the Bundle Theory,” Philosophical Studies, 47 (1985), 95-107.
Reprinted in Contemporary Metaphysics: A Reader, edited by Cynthia MacDonald
and T. Laurence (Oxford: Blackwell Publishers).
Also reprinted in:
Metaphysics: Contemporary Readings, edited by Steven Hales (Jones and Bartlett
Publishing Co, 1999).
Analytical Metaphysics, edited by Michael Tooley (New York: Garland Publishing
Co., 1999).
Metaphysics: Contemporary Readings, edited by Michael J. Loux (Routledge
Publishing Co., 2001). - “Epistemic Supervenience and the Circle of Belief,” The Monist, 68 (1985), 90-
104. - “Why a Set Contains Its Members Essentially,” Nous, 19 (1985), 585-602.
- “Mereological Essentialism, Mereological Conjunctivism, and Identity Through
Time,” Midwest Studies in Philosophy, Vol. 11, edited by Peter A. French,
Theodore E. Uehling, Jr., and Howard K. Wettstein (Minneapolis: University of
Minnesota Press, 1986), pp. 141-56.
Reprinted in Identity (Volume 2 in the International Research Library of
Philosophy), edited by Harold Noonan (Aldershot, UK: Ashgate Publishing
Company, 1993).
Also reprinted in Metaphysics: Contemporary Readings, edited by Steven Hales
(Jones and Bartlett Publishing Co, 1999). - “Kant’s First and Second Paralogisms,” The Monist, 69 (1986), 483-88.
- “Right, Left, and the Fourth Dimension,” The Philosophical Review 96 (1987), 33-68
- “Comments on Paul Guyer’s ‘The Failure of the B Deduction,’” in The Southern
Journal of Philosophy, 25 (1987), Supplement on the Spindel Conference, 85-87. - “Inner States and Outer Relations: Kant and the Case for Monadism,” Doing
Philosophy Historically, edited by Peter H. Hare (Buffalo: Prometheus Books,
1988), pp. 231-47. - “Incongruent Counterparts and Things in Themselves,” in Proceedings of the Sixth
International Kant Conference, edited by G. Funke and T.M. Seebohm
(Washington, D.C.: University Press of America, Inc., 1989), pp. 33-45. - “Mind-Dust or Magic? Panpsychism Versus Emergence,” in Volume 4 of
Philosophical Perspectives, edited by J. Tomberlin (Atascadero, California:
Ridgeview Publishing Company, 1990), pp. 215-26. - “Supervenience and Closure,” Philosophical Studies, 58 (1990), 225-38.
Reprinted in Vol. 13 of The Philosopher’s Annual, an annual collection of the ten
best pieces appearing in print during the previous year.
Also reprinted in Supervenience (Volume 26 in the International Research Library
of Philosophy), edited by Jaegwon Kim (Aldershot, UK: Ashgate Publishing
Company, 2002), pp. 285-98. - “Entity, Identity, and Actuality: A Critical Review,” Philosophical Papers, 20
(1991), 37-50. - “Semantic Supervenience and Referential Indeterminacy,” The Journal of
Philosophy, 89 (1992), 344-61. - “Analyticity, Undeniability, and Truth,” The Canadian Journal of Philosophy,
Supplementary Volume 18 (1992), 89-111. - “Geometry, Transcendental Idealism, and Kant’s Two Worlds,” in Minds, Ideas,
and Objects, Volume 2 of the North American Kant Society Studies in Philosophy,
edited by Phillip D. Cummins and Guenter Zoeller (Atascadero, California:
Ridgeview Publishing Co., 1992), pp. 291-302. - “Kant” and “Noumena/Phenomena,” in A Companion to Epistemology (Oxford:
Blackwell, 1992), edited by J. Dancy and E. Sosa. - “Bundle Theory,” “Essence/Accident,” “Kant” and “Transcendental Ego,” in A
Companion to Metaphysics, edited by J. Kim and E. Sosa (Oxford: Blackwell,
1993). - “Descartes and the Destruction of the Eternal Truths,” Ratio, 7 (1994), 58-62.
- “Predication Without Universals? A Fling with Ostrich Nominalism,” Philosophy
and Phenomenological Research, 54 (1994), 577-90. - “Dependence,” in The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy, edited by R. Audi
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995). - “Does Truth Supervene on Evidence?,” in Supervenience: New Essays, edited by
U. Yalcin and E. Savellos (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995), pp.
306-15. - “Putnam, Kant, and Secondary Qualities,” Philosophical Papers, 24 (1995), 83-
109. - “The Ideality of Time,” in Proceedings of the Eighth International Kant Congress,
Vol. I (Milwaukee: Marquette University Press, 1995), pp. 411-21. - “Minimal Truth is Realist Truth,” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 56
(1996), 869-75. - “If Meinong is Wrong, Is McTaggart Right?,” Philosophical Topics, 24 (1996),
231-54. - “Incongruent Counterparts and Higher Dimensions,” in Metaphysics: The Big
Questions, edited by P. van Inwagen and D. Zimmerman (Blackwell, 1998), pp.
111-20. - “Epistemic Supervenience Revisited,” Philosophy and Phenomenological
Research, 59 (1999), 1049-55. - “Reid on the First Principles of Contingent Truths,” Reid Studies, 3 (1999), 3-30.
- “The Manifestation Argument Against Realism,” in Realism: Responses and
Reactions (Essays in Honor of P.K. Sen), edited by D.P. Chattopadhyaya et al.
(New Delhi: Indian Council for Philosophical Research, 2000), pp. 228-47. - “Thomas Reid” (co-authored with Ernest Sosa), in The European Philosophers
from Descartes to Nietzsche, edited by S. Emmanuel (Oxford: Blackwell, 2001),
pp. 179-200. - “C.D. Broad,” in A Companion to Analytical Philosophy, edited by A.P. Martinich
and David Sosa (Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 2001), pp. 57-67. - “Borges’s Two Refutations of Time,” Philosophic Exchange, 31 (2001), 54-68.
- “Can Atheists Know Anything?,” in Naturalism Defeated? Essays on
Plantinga’s Argument Against Naturalism, edited by Jim Beilby (Ithaca, N.Y.:
Cornell University Press, 2002), 103-25. - “Receptivity and Our Knowledge of Intrinsic Properties,” Philosophy and
Phenomenological Research, 65 (2002), 218-36. - “Time, Idealism, and the Identity of Indiscernibles,” in Volume 16 of
Philosophical Perspectives, edited by James Tomberlin (Oxford: Blackwell,
2002), pp. 379-93. - “Thomas Reid’s Geometry of Visibles,” The Philosophical Review, 111 (2002),
373-416. - “Precis of Problems from Kant” and “Replies to Ameriks, George, and Langton,”
Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 66 (2003), 190-95 and 219-27. - “Lehrer, Reid, and the First of All Principles,” in The Epistemology of
Keith Lehrer, edited by Erik Olsson (Dordrecht, Holland: Kluwer Academic
Publishers, 2003), pp. 155-72. - “Is Knowledge Easy—Or Impossible? Externalism as the Only Alternative to
Skepticism,” in The Skeptics: Contemporary Essays, edited by Stephen Luper
(Aldershot, UK: Ashgate Publishing Company, 2003), pp. 45-59. - “Reid versus Berkeley on the Inverted Retinal Image,” Philosophical Topics, 31
(2003), 425-55. - “Reid’s Theory of Perception,” in The Cambridge Companion to Reid, edited by
Rene van Woudenberg and Terence Cuneo (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2004), pp. 101-33. - “Externalism and Disjunctivism,” in The Externalist Challenge, edited by Richard
Schantz (Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 2004), pp. 481-92. - “On What There Is Now: Sosa on Two Forms of Relativism,” in Ernest Sosa and
his Critics, edited by John Greco (Oxford: Blackwell, 2004), pp. 249-62. - “Why Coherence is Not Enough: A Defense of Moderate Foundationalism,” in
Contemporary Debates in Epistemology, edited by Matthias Steup and Ernest
Sosa (Oxford: Blackwell, 2005), pp. 168-80; in the second edition of 2014, edited
by Matthias Steup, John Turri, and Ernest Sosa, pp. 255-67. - “Reid on the Credit of Human Testimony,” in The Epistemology of Testimony,
edited by Jennifer Lackey and Ernest Sosa (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2006),
pp. 50-74. - “Thomas Reid,” entry in the second edition of the Macmillan Encyclopedia of
Philosophy (Detroit: Thomson-Gale, 2006), Vol. 8, pp. 322-30. - “Touch, Sound, and Things without the Mind,” Metaphilosophy, 37 ( April 2006),
162-82. - “Reid’s Answer to Molyneux’s Question,” The Monist, 90 (2007), 251-70.
- “The Moon and Sixpence: A Defense of Mereological Universalism,” in
Contemporary Debates in Metaphysics, edited by J. Hawthorne, T. Sider, and D.
Zimmerman (Oxford: Blackwell, 2008), pp. 321-40. - “Reid on Single and Double Vision: Mechanics and Morals,” Journal of Scottish
Philosophy, 6 (2008), 1-20. - “Double Appearances are Double Trouble: Reply to Foster,” Journal of Scottish
Philosophy, 6 (2008), 195-96. - “Reid’s Response to the Skeptic,” in The Oxford Handbook of Skepticism, edited
by John Greco (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008), pp. 286-309. - “Space and Time,” an Extended Essay in A Companion to Metaphysics, 2d
edition, edited by Jaegwon Kim, Ernest Sosa, and Gary Rosenkrantz (Oxford:
Wiley-Blackwell, 2009), pp. 74-83. - “Matter, Space, and Quality: Reflections on Unger’s All the Power in the
World,” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 80 (2010), 457-66. - “Epistemic Humility and Causal Structuralism,” in Perception, Causation, and
Objectivity, edited by J.Roessler, H. Lerman, and N. Eilan (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2011), pp. 82-91. - “Reid on the Real Foundation of the Primary-Secondary Quality Distinction,”
in Primary and Secondary Qualities: The Historical and Ongoing Debate,
edited by Larry Nolan (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011), pp. 274-303. - “Can Coherence Generate Warrant Ex Nihilo? Probability and the Logic of
Concurring Witnesses,” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 82 (2011),
337-80. - “Sosa on Easy Knowledge and the Problem of the Criterion,” Philosophical
Studies, 153 (2011), 19-28. - “Rates of Passage,” Analytical Philosophy, 52 (2011), 141-70.
- “Necessity, Analyticity, and the A Priori,” in Debates in Modern Philosophy,
edited by Stewart Duncan and Antonia Lolordo (New York: Routledge, 2013),
pp. 289-306. (This is a reprint of Chapter 2 of my Problems from Kant.) - “Defining and Defending Nonconceptual Contents and States,” in Philosophical
Perspectives, vol. 26, edited by John Hawthorne and Jason Turner (Oxford:
Wiley-Blackwell, 2012), pp. 411-30. - “Reply to Elgin,” in Contemporary Debates in Epistemology, 2nd edition, edited
by Matthias Steup John Turri, and Ernest Sosa (Oxford: Blackwell, 2013), pp.
271-73. - “Berkeley, Reid, and Sinha on Molyneux’s Question,” in Sensory Integration and
the Unity of Consciousness, edited by Christopher Hill and David Bennett
(Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2014), pp. 193-208. - “Four Questions about Acquired Perception,” in Mind, Knowledge, and Action:
Essays in Honor of Reid’s Tercentenary, edited by T. Buras and R. Copenhaver
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015). - “Troubles for Radical Transparency,” in Qualia and Mental Causation in a
Physical World: Themes from the Philosophy of Jaegwon Kim, edited by
Terence Horgan, Marcelo Sabatés, and David Sosa (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2015), pp. 209-30. - “Does Suppositional Reasoning Solve the Bootstrapping Problem?” Logos and
Episteme, 6 (2015), 351-63. - “Objectivity without Objects: A Priorian Program,” A.N. Prior issue of
Synthese, 193 (2016), 3535-3549. - “Preçis of Problems from Reid” and “Replies to Falkenstein, Copenhaver, and
Winkler,” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 43 (2016), GET pages. - “Reid’s Opposition to Berkeley,” in The Bloomsbury Companion to Berkeley,
edited by R. Brook and B. Belfrage (London: Bloomsbury, 2017), pp. 299-313. - “Reid on Perception, Knowledge, and Will: Replies to Hill, Rysiew, and Yaffe,”
Analytic Philosophy, 59 (2018), 551-71. - “Logicism and Formal Necessity: Reflections on Kant’s Modal Metaphysics,”
Kantian Review, 23 (2018), 449-59. - “Brute Necessity,” Philosophy Compass, 13:9 (2018), e12516.
- “Brute Necessity and the Mind-Body Problem,” in Brute Facts, edited by Elly
Vintiadis and Constantinos Mekios (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018),
pp. 63-96. - “‘Distinction of Reason’ Is an Incomplete Symbol,” Hume Studies, 44 (2018),
59-66. - “Reid versus Berkeley on the Moon Illusion,” in The Senses and
the History of Philosophy, edited by Brian Glenney and Jose Filipe Silva
(London: Routledge, 2019), pp. 218-30. - “Lewis and Taylor as Partners in Sin,” Acta Analytica, 34 (2019), 165-75.
- “Reid on Intentionality and Causation,” in Causation and Cognition, edited by
Dominik Perler and Sebastian Bender (New York: Routledge, 2020), pp. 331-347. - “Humean Humility and its Contemporary Echoes,” in The Routledge Handbook
to Philosophical Humility, edited by M. Alfano, M.P. Lynch, and A. Tanesini
(London: Routledge, 2021), pp. 359-71. - “Two Problems in Spinoza’s Theory of Mind,” in Oxford Studies in the
Philosophy of Mind, vol. 2, edited by Uriah Kriegel (Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 2022), pp. 337-81. - “There Are No Necessary Connections Between Distinct Existences,”
forthcoming in Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, edited by Karen Bennett and
Dean Zimmerman, 2023. - “Substance and Shadow,” Review of Metaphysics, 76 (June 2023).
- “Four Recent Interpretations of Kant’s Second Analogy,” Kant-Studien, 64 (1973),
- Reviews
- T.I. Wilkerson, Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason, Teaching Philosophy, 2 (1977-
78), 387-89. - Laurence BonJour, The Structure of Empirical Knowledge, The Philosophical
Review, 97 (1988), 272-78. - Andrew Brennan, Conditions of Identity, The Philosophical Review, 101 (1992).
- John Bacon, Universals and Property Instances: The Alphabet of Being,
The Philosophical Review, 109 (2000), 107-109. - Michael Devitt, Realism and Truth, second edition, Nous, 34 (2000), 657-63
- Nicholas Wolterstorff, Thomas Reid and the Story of Epistemology, Mind, 113
(2004). - Gideon Yaffe, Manifest Activity, Grazer Philosophische Studien, 70 (2005),
257-60.
- T.I. Wilkerson, Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason, Teaching Philosophy, 2 (1977-
- Articles:
Invited Lectures
“Comments on Professor Hall’s Paper,” American Philosophical Association Eastern
Division Meeting, December 1974.
“Cartesianism and Neo-Pragmatism: Comments on Professor Johnsen’s Paper,”
American Philosophical Association Western Division Meeting, April 1975.
“Kant’s Principles of Substance and Causation,” University of Toronto Lecture Series
on Kant, February 1977.
“Thick and Thin Experience in Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason,” Invited Paper at the
American Philosophical Association Eastern Division Meeting, December 1977.
“The Cartesian Circle and the Circle of Belief,” University of Nebraska Philosophy
Department Colloquium, September 1978.
“Another Volley at Kant’s Reply to Hume,” University of Western Ontario
Conference on the Second Analogy, April 1979.
“Kant’s Second Antinomy,” Hamilton College Philosophy Department Colloquium,
May 1979.
“Incongruent Counterparts and the Fourth Dimension,” Franklin and Marshall College
Philosophy Department Colloquium, November 1979.
“Right, Left, and the Need for a Body: Comments on Professor Robinson’s Paper,”
American Philosophical Association Eastern Division Meetings, December 1979.
“Kant’s Second Antinomy,” University of Rhode Island Philosophy Department
Colloquium, March 1980.
“Incongruent Counterparts and the Fourth Dimension,” University of Massachusetts
(Amherst) Philosophy Department Colloquium, April 1980.
“Kant’s Second Antinomy” and “Descartes’ Argument for Mind-Body Dualism” (two
lectures), Banaras Hindu University, Banaras, India, September 1980.
“Descartes’ Argument for Mind-Body Dualism,” University of Rajasthan, Jaipur,
India, September 1980.
“The Problem of Induction,” Visva-Bharati University, Santiniketan, India, December
1980
“Foundationalism and the Infinite Regress of Reasons,” Patna University, Patna,
India, January 1981.
“The Problem of Personal Identity,” Vidyamandir College, Belur Math, India,
February 1981.
“Right, Left, and the Fourth Dimension” and “Three Versions of the Bundle Theory,”
University of Miami Philosophy Department Colloquia, March and April 1983.
“Right, Left and the Fourth Dimension,” Florida Atlantic University Public Lecture,
April 1983.
“Epistemic Supervenience and the Circle of Belief,” Invited Paper at the Eastern
Division Meeting of the American Philosophical Association, December 1983.
“The Grounds and Consequences of Berkeley’s Anti-Abstractionism” (Comments on
M. Atherton’s paper), Berkeley Tercentenary Conference, Newport, RI, March 1985.
“Incongruent Counterparts and Things in Themselves,” Sixth International Kant
Congress, The Pennsylvania State University, September 1985.
“Comments on Professor Guyer’s Paper,” Spindel Conference on the B Deduction,
Memphis State University, October 1986.
“Kant’s Argument for Monadism,” Conference on “Doing Philosophy Historically,”
SUNY at Buffalo, April 1987.
“The Problem of Temporary Intrinsics,” Syracuse University Philosophy Department
Colloquium, March 1989.
“Geometry and Transcendental Idealism,” North Carolina State University Philosophy
Department Colloquium, March 1989.
“Geometry and Transcendental Idealism,” University of Iowa Conference on Ideas in
17th and 18th Century Philosophy, April 1989.
“Descartes’ Concepts of Substance” (Comments on P. Markie’s paper), American
Philosophical Association Central Division Meeting April, 1989.
“The Problem of Temporary Intrinsics,” Brandeis University Philosophy Department
Colloquium, November 1989.
“Realism, Relativism, and Indeterminacy,” Davidson College Philosophy Department
Colloquium, November 1990.
Comments on P. Cummins’ “Berkeley’s Manifest Qualities Thesis,” delivered at the
December 1990 Meeting of the International Berkeley Society.
“Semantic Supervenience and Referential Indeterminacy,” University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill Philosophy Department Colloquium, January 1991.
“Kant and Secondary Qualities,” Wake Forest University Philosophy Department
Colloquium, February 1991.
“Kant and Secondary Qualities,” Eastern Carolina University Philosophy Department
Colloquium, March 1991.
“Kant and Secondary Qualities,” Virginia Commonwealth University Philosophy
Department Colloquium, March 1991.
“Kant and Secondary Qualities,” Virginia Polytechnic Institute Philosophy
Department Colloquium, April 1991.
“Kant and Secondary Qualities,” University of Rochester Philosophy Department
Colloquium, February 1992.
“A Fling with Ostrich Nominalism,” a main paper at the Greensboro Colloquium in
Philosophy, April 1992.
“Analyticity, Undeniability, and Truth,” University of Connecticut Philosophy Department Colloquium, April 1992.
“Kant’s Copernican Revolution,” United States Military Academy, October 1993.
Comments on “Against Mereological Conjunctivism,” American Philosophical
Association Eastern Division Meeting, December 1993.
Invited presentation at Meeting of North American Kant Society, Boston,
December 1994.
Invited presentation at Meeting of International Kant Congress, Memphis, March
1995.
“If Meinong is Wrong, Is McTaggart Right?,” Syracuse University Philosophy
Department Colloquium, April 1996.
Invited Presentation at a symposium on the philosophy of Keith Lehrer, American
Philosophical Association Eastern Division Meeting, December 1996.
“Thomas Reid on First Principles,” First International Reid Symposium, Aberdeen,
Scotland, July 1998.
“Contemporary Criticisms of the Thing in Itself,” invited presentation at the World
Congress of Philosophy, Boston, August 1998.
“Thomas Reid on First Principles,” Lewis White Beck Memorial Conference,
University of Rochester, September 1998.
“Kant’s First Analogy,” University of California at San Diego Philosophy Department
Colloquium, February 1999.
“Thomas Reid’s Geometry of Visibles,” University of Arkansas Philosophy
Department Colloquium, April 1999.
Comments on Tyler Burge, Hartry Field, Alvin Goldman, and John Hawthorne,
Rutgers Epistemology Conference, April 2000.
“Thomas Reid’s Geometry of Visibles,” Second International Reid Symposium,
Aberdeen, Scotland, July 2000.
“Thomas Reid’s Geometry of Visibles,” Cornell University Philosophy Department
Colloquium, September 2000.
“Borges’s Two Refutations of Time,” University of Notre Dame Philosophy
Department Colloquium, November 2000.
Two lectures under the auspices of the Center for Philosophic Exchange, State
University of New York College at Brockport, November and December 2000.
Comments on Ryan Nichols’ “Reid on Visible Figure,” American Philosophical
Association Pacific Division Meeting, March 2001.
“Thomas Reid’s Geometry of Visibles,” New York University Philosophy Department
Colloquium, November 2001.
“Thomas Reid’s Geometry of Visibles,” Sievert Lecture, University of Iowa, March
2002.
“Is Reid a Direct Realist?” Reid Society Meeting, Seattle, March 2002.
“Thomas Reid’s Geometry of Visibles,” Pomona College Philosophy Department
Colloquium, April 2002.
“Critical Reflections on Wolterstorff’s Reid,” Yale University, April 2002.
“What is Direct Perception?” Reid Society Meeting, Philadelphia, December 2002.
“Critical Reflections on Wolterstorff’s Reid,” American Philosophical Association
Eastern Division Meeting, December 2002.
“Fumerton on Epistemic Probability,” American Philosophical Association Pacific
Division Meeting, March 2003.
“Allais and Langton on Kant,” comments delivered at North American Kant Society
session at American Philosophical Association Pacific Division Meeting, March
2004.
“Reid Versus Berkeley on the Inverted Retinal Image,” California State University at
San Bernardino Philosophy Department Colloquium, April 2004.
“Reid Versus Berkeley on the Inverted Retinal Image,” University of Kwa-Zulu Natal
Philosophy Department Colloquium, Durban, South Africa, May 2004.
“Touch, Sound, and Things Without the Mind,” keynote address at conference on
Knowledge and Imagination, Free University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands, June
2004.
“Reid’s Answer to Molyneux’s Question,” Third International Reid Symposium,
Aberdeen, Scotland, July 2004.
Seminar Leader at Davidson College Philosophy Department Retreat, November
2004.
“Hume versus Reid on Testimony and Miracles,” plenary presentation at a conference
on Hume and his critics, Baylor University, April 2005.
“Rates of Passage,” University of California at Davis Philosophy Department
Colloquium, April 2005.
“Rates of Passage,” Reed College Philosophy Department Colloquium, November
2005.
“Touch, Sound, and Things without the Mind,” Lewis and Clark College Philosophy
Department Colloquium, November 2005.
“Rates of Passage,” North Carolina State Philosophy Department Colloquium,
February 2006.
“Rates of Passage,” University of California at San Diego Philosophy Department
Colloquium, March 2006.
Comments on G. Grandi’s “Reid’s Direct Realism about Vision,” American
Philosophical Association Pacific Division Meeting, March 2006.
“Can Coherence Generate Warrant Ex Nihilo?” Claremont Colleges Workshop in
Epistemology, April 2006.
“Reid on Single and Double Vision: Mechanics and Morals,” International Workshop
on Thomas Reid and the Philosophy of Mind, Stockholm, Sweden, August 2006.
“Reid on Single and Double Vision: Mechanics and Morals,” University of Colorado
at Boulder Philosophy Department Colloquium, September 2006.
Comments on David Sosa’s “Perceptual Friction,” SOFIA Conference on the
Metaphysics of Epistemology, Cancun, Mexico, January 2007.
“Reid’s Answer to Molyneux’s Question,” Southwest Seminar on Early Modern
Philosophy, UCSD, February 2007.
“Can Coherence Generate Warrant Ex Nihilo?” Bled Epistemology Conference, Bled,
Slovenia, June 2007.
“Direct Realism and Double Vision,” Seattle Pacific University Philosophy
Department Colloquium, November 2007.
“Epistemic Bootstrapping,” Invited Symposium Presentation at American
Philosophical Association Pacific Division Meeting, March 2008.
“Are We Living in a Computer Simulation?” Cal State University at Fullerton
Symposium on Philosophy and Science Fiction, March 2008.
“Berkeley versus Reid on Three Puzzles of Vision,” International Berkeley
Conference, Newport, RI, June 2008.
“Berkeley versus Reid on Three Puzzles of Vision,” Brown University Lecture Series,
October 2008.
“Rates of Passage,” University of Missouri Philosophy Department Colloquium,
December 2008.
“Reid on Primary and Secondary Qualities,” Invited Session at American
Philosophical Association Pacific Division Meeting, Vancouver, April 2009.
“Can Coherence Generate Warrant Ex Nihilo?,” University of California at Irvine
Philosophy Department Colloquium, April 2009.
“Can Coherence Generate Warrant Ex Nihilo?,” a main presentation at the Rutgers
Epistemology Conference, May 2009.
“Berkeley versus Reid on Three Puzzles of Vision,” Conference on the Tercentennial
of Berkeley’s Theory of Vision, Karlsruhe, Germany, August 2009.
“Berkeley versus Reid on Three Puzzles of Vision,” Cal State LA Philosophy
Department Colloquium, November 2009.
“Four Questions about Acquired Perception,” Conference on Thomas Reid from his
Time to Ours, Aberdeen and Glasgow, Scotland, March 2010.
“Sosa on Easy Knowledge and the Problem of the Criterion,” Author Meets Critics
Session at the American Philosophical Association Pacific Division Meeting, April
2010.
“Berkeley and Reid on Perception of Depth,” Harvard University Conference on
Space Perception, October 2010.
“Rates of Passage,” University of Texas Symposium on Analytical Philosophy,
December 2010.
“Substance and Shadow,” Inland Pacific Philosophy Conference, Boise State
University, April, 2011.
“Thomas Reid on Direct Realism and Nonexistent Objects of Conception,” Duke
University Philosophy Department Colloquium, September 2011.
“Thomas Reid on Direct Realism and Nonexistent Objects of Conception,” University
of Vermont Philosophy Department Colloquium, October 2011.
“The Physics and Metaphysics of Time Travel,” John Dewey Lecture at the
University of Vermont, October 2011.
“Thomas Reid on Direct Realism and Nonexistent Objects of Conception,” North
Carolina State University Philosophy Department Colloquium, November 2011.
“Thomas Reid on Freedom of the Will and Agent Causation,” Davidson College
Philosophy Department Colloquium, April 2012.
“Agent Causation and Backwards Causation,” conference at Chapman University,
February 2013.
“Thomas Reid on Direct Realism and Nonexistent Objects of Conception,” University
of California at Santa Barbara Philosophy Department Colloquium, April 2013.
“Thomas Reid on Direct Realism and Nonexistent Objects of Conception,”
Dartmouth College Philosophy Department Colloquium, August 2013.
“Thomas Reid on Direct Realism and Nonexistent Objects of Conception,” University
of California at San Bernardino College Philosophy Department Colloquium, January
2014.
“Thomas Reid on Direct Realism and Nonexistent Objects of Conception,” University
of British Columbia Philosophy Department Colloquium, February 2014.
“The Physics and Metaphysics of Time Travel,” California Polytechnic State
University at Pomona Philosophy Department Colloquium, May 2014.
“Objectivity without Objects: A Priorian Program,” Arthur N. Prior Centenary
Conference, Oxford University, August 2014.
“Reid’s Response to Malebranche’s Master Argument,” University of Arizona
Philosophy Department Event, February 2015.
“The Physics and Metaphysics of Time Travel,” Keynote Address at UCLA
Undergraduate Philosophy Conference, May 2015.
“Desiderata for an Interpretation of Kant’s Transcendental Idealism,” Symposium at
the American Philosophical Association Pacific Division Meeting, April 2016.
“Brute Necessity,” Dalhousie University Philosophy Department Colloquium, May
2016.
“Replies to Campbell and Hopp,” Author Meets Critics session on my book Problems
from Reid, American Philosophical Association Central Division Meeting, March
2017
“Brute Necessity,” Washington University in St. Louis Philosophy Department
Colloquium, April 2017.
“Brute Necessity,” University of Missouri at Columbia Philosophy Department
Colloquium, April 2017.
“Brute Necessity,” MIT Philosophy Department Colloquium, October 2017.
Author Meets Critics Session on Problems from Reid with the Early Modern Research
Group at the University of Western Ontario, November 2017.
“Exemplar Representation and Explanatory Loops,” Conference in honor of Keith
Lehrer, University of Arizona, March 2018.
“Reid on Intentionality and Causation,” Conference on Causation and Cognition in
Early Modern Philosophy, Humboldt University, Berlin, June 2018.
“Two Ways to Skin a Skeptic: Reid’s Realism and Kant’s Idealism,” Workshop on
Skepticism and Anti-Skepticism at the University of Hamburg, June 2018.
“Substance and Shadow,” conference on systematic metaphysics at the Jerusalem
Philosophical Encounter, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, January 2020.
“How Rich is the Content of Perception?,” guest lecture at a Brown University
seminar on perception, December 2020.
“There Are No Necessary Connections between Distinct Existences,” University of
Rochester Philosophy Department Colloquium, April 2021.
Other Professional Activities
Occasional referee of articles for Nous, Philosophical Review, Philosophical Studies,
Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, Canadian Journal of Philosophy,
Synthese, Erdos, Journal of Philosophical Research, American Philosophical
Quarterly, Pacific Philosophical Quarterly, Australasian Journal of Philosophy,
Philosophy of Science, Erkenntnis, Journal of the History of Philosophy, Mind,
Archiv fur Geschichte der Philosophie, European Journal of Philosophy,
Philosophical Quarterly, British Journal for the History of Philosophy, Philosophical
Imprint, Dialectica, Journal of the American Philosophical Association, Acta
Analytica, and The Review of Metaphysics; of book manuscripts for the State
University of New York Press, the University of Minnesota Press, Cornell University
Press, Oxford University Press, Cambridge University Press, Edinburgh University Press, Bloomsbury Academic Press, and McGraw-Hill.
Vice President of the Rhode Island Philosophical Society, 1985-86.
Co-organizer (with Ernest Sosa) of a conference in honor of R. M. Chisholm on his seventieth birthday, held at Brown University in November of 1986.
Honors Examiner at Swarthmore College, May 1988, May 1997, May 2011, and May 2021.
Evaluator of Philosophy Program at Bentley College, January 1990, and of
Philosophy Program and Lewis and Clark College, October 2008.
Member of Selection Committee for NEH Summer Seminar, March 1990; member of Review Panel for NEH Fellowships, May 2021.
Occasional docent at Whitehall, George Berkeley’s home during his stay in America (summers of 1985, 1988, and 1990).
Member of Program Committee of the Eastern Division of the American Philosophical Association, 1981-82 and 1993-95.
Member of Advisory Committee to the Program Committee of the American Philosophical Association (Eastern Division), 1998-2001 (field: History of Modern
Philosophy).
Courses Taught
Historical Introduction to Philosophy
Reason and Religion
Philosophy East and West
Science, Perception, and Reality
Time and Time Travel
The Ways of Paradox
Mind, Matter, and Mystery
Symbolic Logic
Philosophical Logic
Theory of Knowledge
Metaphysics
Philosophy of Science
Philosophy of Perception
Philosophy of Language
Philosophy of Psychology
Philosophy of Art
History of Modern Philosophy
Continental Rationalism
British Empiricism
Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason
Twentieth-Century Analytic Philosophy
Graduate Seminars in Epistemology, Metaphysics, and the History of Modern
Philosophy (e.g., Foundationalism and Coherentism, Personal Identity, Ontology
and Objectivity, Kant, Hume, Reid)