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Huw Price
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PUBLICATIONS & PREPRINTS
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This list includes my
books
and philosophical articles,
a selection of my book
reviews, and some
recent
preprints. Most of the
articles, reviews and preprints are accessible here
in electronic form. I include links to
JSTOR
copies of published papers, where available. (If
you are unable to access these papers, it is
probably because your institution does not
subscribe to JSTOR.)
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Books
- Facts and
the Function of Truth, Blackwell, Oxford,
1988. (Second edition forthcoming from Oxford University
Press.)
[Contents and Introduction
in PDF]
Many areas of philosophy employ a distinction between
factual and nonfactual (descriptive/nondescriptive,
cognitive/noncognitive, ...) uses of language. This book
examines the various ways in which this distinction is
normally elucidated, argues that all are unsatisfactory,
and suggests that the search for a sharp distinction is
misconceived. I develop an alternative approach, based on
a novel theory of the function and origins of the concept
of truth. The central hypothesis is that the main role of
the normative notion of truth is to encourage speakers to
argue, with long-run behavioural advantages. This offers
a fresh perspective on many debates about realism in
contemporary philosophy.
"This is ... a challenging book. The challenge is not
easy to meet and the solution proposed not easy to
dismiss. The topic is central; the approach novel; the
execution skilful. The book deserves a wide audience." —
Mind. [Full
review at JSTOR]
- Time's Arrow and Archimedes'
Point: New Directions for the Physics of Time,
Oxford University Press, New York, 1996.
[Home Page|Contents|Chapter
1|Reviews|Polish|Japanese]
"Lest you begin to think I’m a mass media whore with the attention span of a gnat, I’m a huge fan of Tom Stoppard’s
Arcadia, love the poetry of John Donne and e.e. cummings, and occasionally peruse such weighty tomes as
Huw Price’s Time’s Arrow and Archimedes’ Point. So there." — Jennifer
Ouellette [Link]
- (Edited with Richard
Corry) Causation, Physics,
and the Constitution of Reality: Russell's Republic
Revisited, Oxford University Press, 2007.
Contributors: Arif Ahmed,
Helen Beebee, Richard Corry, Antony Eagle, Adam Elga,
Mathias Frisch, Christopher Hitchcock, Douglas Kutach,
Barry Loewer, Peter Menzies, John D. Norton, Huw Price,
Jim Woodward. [Details
on OUP catalogue.]
- Naturalism Without
Mirrors, Oxford University Press, 2008.
A collection of old and new essays on pragmatism,
pluralism and the placement problem. (The previously
published essays include items 17, 18, 21, 26, 29, 34,
40, 41, 42, 43, 46 and 51 in the list below.)
Articles in journals and
collections
- Sense, assertion, Dummett and
denial. Mind 92(1983) 174—88.
[JSTOR]
- "Could a question be true?":
Assent and the basis of meaning. The
Philosophical Quarterly 33(1983) 354—64.
[JSTOR]
- Does "Probably" modify
sense? Australasian Journal of Philosophy
61(1983) 396—408. [PDF]
- Mellor, chance and the single
case. British Journal for the Philosophy of
Science 35(1984) 11—23. [JSTOR]
- The philosophy and physics of
affecting the past. Synthese
16(1984) 299—323. [PDF]
- Against causal decision theory.
Synthese 67(1986) 195—212.
[PDF]
- Conditional credence.
Mind 95(1986) 18—36. [JSTOR]
- Truth and the nature of
assertion. Mind 96(1987) 202—220.
[JSTOR]
- Action explanation and the
nature of mind. In Albury and Slezak, eds.,
Computers, Brains and Minds: Papers in Cognitive
Science, Kluwer, 1988, 221—251.
- Defending desire-as-belief.
Mind 98(1989) 119—127.
[JSTOR]
- A point on the arrow of time.
Nature, 20 July 1989, 181—182.
[PDF]
This is comment on Stephen Hawking's A Brief History
of Time. It was discussed with responses from Hawking
and others in an editorial column in Scientific
American (October 1989).
- (With Philip Pettit) Bare
functional desire. Analysis 49(1989)
162—169. [JSTOR]
- Why "Not"? Mind
99(1990) 221—238. [JSTOR]
- Agency and probabilistic
causality. British Journal for the Philosophy
of Science 42(1991) 157—176. [PDF][JSTOR]
- The asymmetry of radiation:
reinterpreting the Wheeler-Feynman argument.
Foundations of Physics 21(1991)
959—975.
- Agency and causal asymmetry.
Mind 101(1992) 501—520.
[JSTOR]
- Metaphysical pluralism.
Journal of Philosophy 89(1992)
387—409. [JSTOR]
- Two paths to pragmatism.
In Peter Menzies (ed.), Response-Dependent
Concepts, Canberra: Philosophy Program, RSSS, ANU, 46—82. [RTF
of revised version (see item 27 below)]
- (With Peter Menzies) Causation
as a secondary quality. British Journal for the
Philosophy of Science 44(1993) 187—203.
[RTF][PDF][JSTOR]
- The direction of causation:
Ramsey's ultimate contingency. In David Hull,
Micky Forbes and Kathleen Okruhlik (eds.), PSA 1992,
Volume 2 (East Lansing, Michigan, Philosophy of
Science Association), 253—267. [PDF][JSTOR]
- Semantic minimalism and the
Frege point. In Tsohatzidis, S.L.(ed.),
Foundations of Speech Act Theory: Philosophical and
Linguistic Perspectives, Routledge, 1994,
pp. 132-55. Reprinted with a new postscript in
Garrett, B. and Mulligan, K. (eds.), Themes From
Wittgenstein, Canberra: Philosophy Program, RSSS,
ANU, 1993, 15—44. [RTF/PDF
of latter version]
- A neglected route to realism
about Quantum Mechanics. Mind
103(1994) 303—336; reprinted in Grim, P., Mar, G.
& Williams, P. (eds.) The
Philosopher's Annual, XVII, Ridgeview, 1996,
181—215. [Abstract
and preprint at LANL archive][JSTOR]
- Psychology in
perspective. In Michael, M. and O'Leary-Hawthorne,
J. (eds), Philosophy in Mind: The Place of Philosophy
in the Study of the Mind, Kluwer, 1994, 83—98.
[RTF]
- Reinterpreting the
Wheeler-Feynman Absorber Theory: Reply to Leeds.
British Journal for the Philosophy of Science
45(1994) 1023—1028. [JSTOR]
- Cosmology, time's arrow and
that old double standard. In Savitt, S. (ed.),
Time's Arrows Today, Cambridge University Press,
1995, 66-94. Reprinted in Sklar , L (ed.), The
Philosophy of Physics, Garland, 2000, 392—420.
[Abstract
and preprint at LANL archive]
- (With John O'Leary-Hawthorne)
How to stand up for
non-cognitivists. Australasian Journal of
Philosophy 74(1996) 275—292. [PDF]
- Two paths to pragmatism
II. Casati, R. and Tappolet, C., eds., European
Review of Philosophy 3(1998) 109—147.
[RTF]
- Backward causation and the
direction of causal processes: Reply to Dowe.
Mind 105(1996) 467—474. [JSTOR]
- Naturalism and the
fate of the M-worlds. Proceedings of the
Aristotelian Society, Supp. Vol., LXXI(1997) 247—267
[RTF].
Concepts such as those of morality, modality, meaning and
the mental are difficult to "place" in a naturalistic
world view. This paper offers a novel placement strategy,
based on a naturalistic pluralism about the functions of
descriptive discourse. It is argued that this functional
pluralism is more attractive than familiar alternatives,
such as naturalistic reductionism, nonnaturalism,
noncognitivism and eliminativism. The strategy exploits
Carnap's views about the nature of ontological
issues.
There is a reply to this
paper by Frank
Jackson [also in RTF].
- 'Chaos theory and the
difference between past and future', paper presented
to the 9th Conference of the International Society for
the Study of Time, Sainte-Adèle, Québec,
2—8 July, 1995. In Fraser, J. T., Soulsby, M. P. and
Argyros, A. J. (eds.), Time, Order, Chaos: The Study
of Time, Vol. IX. Madison, CT: International
Universities Press, 1998, 155—162. [RTF]
Contemporary writers often claim that chaos theory
explains the thermodynamic arrow of time. This paper
argues that such claims are mistaken, on two levels.
First, they underestimate the difficulty of extracting
asymmetric conclusions from symmetric theories. More
important, however, they misunderstand the nature of the
puzzle about the temporal asymmetry of thermodynamics,
and simply address the wrong issue. Both of these are old
mistakes, but mistakes which are poorly recognised, even
today. This paper aims to lay bare the mistakes in their
classical (pre-chaos theory) manifestations, in order to
make it clear that chaos theory cannot possibly do
better.
- Time symmetry in
microphysics. Philosophy of Science
64(1997) S235-244. [JSTOR][HTML][RTF]
Physics normally takes for granted that interacting
physical systems with no common history are independent,
before their interaction. This principle is
time-asymmetric, for no such restriction applies after an
interaction to systems with no common future. The time
asymmetry is normally attributed to boundary conditions.
I argue that there are two distinct independence
principles of this kind at work in contemporary physics,
one of which cannot be attributed to boundary conditions,
and therefore conflicts with the assumed T (or CPT)
symmetry of microphysics. I note that this may have
interesting ramifications in quantum mechanics.
- What should a deflationist
about truth say about meaning? in Villanueva, E.
(ed.), Truth (Philosophical Issues, Vol. 8),
Ridgeview, 1997, 107—115. [RTF]
- The role of history
in microphysics. In Sankey, H. (ed.), Causation
and Laws of Nature, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1999,
437—456. [Abstract]
- Carnap,
Quine and the fate of metaphysics. In The
Electronic Journal of Analytic Philosophy Issue 5
(Spring, 1997). [PDF]
- Three norms of assertibility,
or how the MOA became extinct. In Tomberlin, J.,
ed., Philosophical Perspectives 12(1998)
41—54. [JSTOR][PDF]
- Causation in the special
sciences: the case for pragmatism. In Domenico
Costantini, Maria Carla Galavotti and Patrick Suppes,
eds., Stochastic
Causality, CSLI Publications, 2001, 103—120.
[PDF]
- Backward causation, hidden
variables, and the meaning of completeness.
PRAMANA -
Journal of Physics (Indian Academy of Sciences),
56(2001) 199—209. [PDF]
Bell's Theorem requires the assumption that hidden
variables are independent of future measurement settings.
This independence assumption rests on surprisingly shaky
ground. In particular, it is puzzlingly time-asymmetric.
The paper begins with a summary of the case for
considering hidden variable models which, in abandoning
this independence assumption, allow a degree of 'backward
causation'. The remainder of the paper clarifies the
physical significance of such models, in relation to the
issue as to whether quantum mechanics provides a complete
description of physical reality.
- Boltzmann's time bomb.
British Journal for the Philosophy of Science,
53(2002) 83—119. [PDF]
Since the late nineteenth century, physics has been
puzzled by the time-asymmetry of the thermodynamic
phenomena in the light of the apparent T-symmetry of the
underlying laws of mechanics. However, a compelling
solution has proved elusive. In part, I argue, this can
be attributed to a failure to distinguish two conceptions
of the problem. According to one, the main focus of our
attention is a time-asymmetric law-like generalisation.
According to the other, it is a particular fact about the
early universe. This paper aims (i) to distinguish these
two different conceptions of the time-asymmetric
explanandum in thermodynamics; (ii) to argue in favour of
the latter; and (iii) to show that whichever we choose,
our rational expectations about the thermodynamic
behaviour of the future must depend on what we know about
the past -- contrary to the common view, statistical
arguments alone do not give us good reason to expect that
entropy will always continue to increase.
- Burbury's last case: the
mystery of the entropic arrow. In Craig Callender,
ed., Time, Reality and Experience, Cambridge
University Press, 2002, 19—56. [PDF]
"Does not the theory of a general tendency of entropy to
diminish [sic] take too much for granted? To a
certain extent it is supported by experimental evidence.
We must accept such evidence as far as it goes and no
further. We have no right to supplement it by a large
draft of the scientific imagination." (Samuel Burbury,
1904)
- (With Richard
Holton) Ramsey on saying and
whistling: a discordant note. Noûs
37:2(2003) 325—341. [PDF]
On Ramsey's late view of the non-propositional status of
generalisation, and its connection to the rule following
considerations.
- Truth as convenient
friction. Journal of Philosophy
100(2003) 167—190. Also to appear in Grim, P.,
Mar, G. & Williams, P. (eds.) The
Philosopher's Annual, XXVI (2003). [Abstract]
[PDF]
- Naturalism without
representationalism. In David Macarthur and Mario
de Caro (eds), Naturalism
in Question (Harvard University Press, 2004),
71—88. Reprinted in Italian as 'Naturalismo senza
rappresentazionalismo', in La Mente e La Natura
(Fazi Editore, Rome, 2005), 58—77. [PDF]
I begin with a distinction between two ways of taking
science to be relevant to philosophy. The first ("object
naturalism") is a ontological thesis -- it holds that
what exists, what we should be realists about, is the
world as revealed by science. The second ("subject
naturalism") is a prescription for philosophy, based on
the belief that we humans (and in particular, our thought
and talk) are part of the natural world. What is the
relationship between these two kinds of naturalism?
Contemporary naturalists are apt to think that the latter
view is a mere corollary of the former. I argue that
there is an important sense in which the priority is the
other way around: object naturalism depends on
"validation" from a subject naturalist perspective -- in
particular, on confirmation of certain
"representationalist" assumptions about the functions of
human language. Moreover, I maintain, there are good
reasons for doubting whether object naturalism deserves
to be validated, in this sense. Thus, an adequate
naturalistic philosophy threatens to undermine what most
contemporary philosophers have in mind, when they call
themselves philosophical naturalists.
- Immodesty without mirrors —
making sense of Wittgenstein's linguistic
pluralism. In Max Kölbel and Bernhard Weiss
(eds), Wittgenstein's
Lasting Significance (Routledge & Kegan Paul,
2004), 179—205. [PDF]
- On the origins of the arrow of
time: why there is still a puzzle about the low entropy
past. In Christopher Hitchcock, ed., Contemporary
Debates in the Philosophy of Science (Blackwell,
2004), 219—239. [PDF]
- Models and modals. In
Donald Gillies, ed., Laws and Models in Science
(King's College Publications, 2004), 49—69.
[PDF]
Pragmatists recommend that in approaching a problematic
concept in philosophy, we should begin by examining the
role it plays in the practical, cognitive and linguistic
lives of the creatures who use it. This paper stems from
an interest in pragmatic accounts, in this sense, of the
various modal notions we encounter in science. I propose
that pragmatists about these notions should avail
themselves of the vocabulary of theoretical models. This
vocabulary brings to the foreground the issues of
function, use and role in practice, on which pragmatists
want to focus; while downplaying the naive
representationalism that pragmatists see as an impediment
to good philosophy. I show how this framework may be used
to delineate a kind of pragmatic perspectivalism about
probability, and argue that the same template offers a
promising way to make sense of the link between causation
and manipulability.
- The semantic foundations of
metaphysics. Forthcoming in Ian Ravenscroft, ed.,
Minds, Worlds and Conditionals: Essays in Honour of
Frank Jackson (OUP). [PDF]
- The thermodynamic arrow:
puzzles and pseudo-puzzles. In Ikaros Bigi and
Martin Faessler, eds., Time and Matter (World
Scientific, 2006), 209—224. [Abstract][PDF]
- Causal perspectivalism.
In Huw Price and Richard Corry, eds., Causation,
Physics and the Constitution of Reality: Russell's
Republic Revisited (OUP, 2007), 250—292.
[PDF]
Concepts employed in folk descriptions of the world often
turn out to be more perspectival than they seem at first
sight, involving previously unrecognised sensitivity to
the viewpoint or 'situation' of the user of the concept
in question. Often, it is progress in science that
reveals such perspectivity, and the deciding factor is
that we realise that other creatures would apply the same
concepts with different extension, in virtue of
differences between their circumstances and ours. In this
paper I argue that causal concepts are perspectival in
this way, and describe the 'situation' on which they
depend in terms of an abstract characterisation of the
viewpoint of a deliberating agent. I argue that this
approach makes better sense than rivals of the apparent
asymmetry and temporal orientation of the causal
relation.
- Recent work on the arrow of
radiation. In Studies in History and Philosophy
of Modern Physics, 37(2006), 498—527.
[Abstract]
[PDF
at the Pittsburgh PhilSci Archive]
- Einstein and the quantum
spooks. In C. Stewart & R Hewitt (eds),
Waves of the Future (Science Foundation for
Physics, 2005), 221—233. [PDF
courtesy of the Science
Foundation for Physics.]
- Time's arrow, time's
fly-bottle. In Friedrich Stadler and Michael
Stöltzner, eds., Time and History, Frankfurt:
Ontos Verlag, 2006, 253—273.
- (With David Macarthur)
Pragmatism, quasi-realism and the
global challenge. In Cheryl Misak, ed., The New
Pragmatists (OUP, 2007), 91—120. [Abstract]
[PDF]
- (With Peter Menzies) Is
semantics in the plan? To appear in D.
Braddon-Mitchell & R. Nola, eds., Naturalism and
Analysis (MIT, 2007). [Abstract]
[PDF]
- One cheer for representationalism? To appear in R. Auxier, ed., The Philosophy of Richard Rorty (Open Court, Library of Living Philosophers XXXII, 2008). [PDF]
- Quining naturalism. Journal of Philosophy
104(2007) 375—405.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
- Brandom and Hume on the genealogy of modals. To appear in Philosophical Topics.
[PDF]
This is a lightly edited version of my comments on Lecture 4 of Bob
Brandom’s Locke Lectures, as repeated in Prague in April 2007.
Recordings of the Prague lectures, including commentaries and
discussions, are available here. The slides that accompanied my talk are available here.
- Decisions, decisions, decisions: can Savage salvage Everettian probability?
[Abstract
and PDF at the Pittsburgh PhilSci
Archive]
A slightly shorter version of
this paper is to appear in a volume edited by Jonathan Barrett, Adrian
Kent, David Wallace and Simon Saunders, containing papers presented at
the Everett@50 conference in Oxford in July 2007, and the Many Worlds@50
meeting at the Perimeter Institute in September 2007. The paper is
based on my talk at the latter meeting (audio, video and slides of
which are accessible here).
- Toy models for retrocausality.
Forthcoming in Studies in History and Philosophy
of Modern Physics, 39(2008). [Abstract
and PDF at ArXiv.org]
- Metaphysics after Carnap: the ghost who walks? To appear in David Chalmers, Ryan Wasserman and David Manley, eds., Metametaphysics (OUP, 2009).
[PDF]
[Top]
Recent preprints
- 'Not' again.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
- Probability in the Everett
world: comments on Wallace and Greaves.
[Abstract
and PDF at the Pittsburgh PhilSci
Archive]
[Top]
Review articles
- Review of K.G. & J.S. Denbigh, Entropy in
Relation to Incomplete Knowledge, Cambridge
University Press, 1985, and H.D. Zeh, The Physical
Basis of the Direction of Time, Springer-Verlag,
Berlin, 1989; British Journal for the Philosophy of
Science 42(1991) 111—144. [JSTOR]
- Discussion review of Philip Pettit, The Common
Mind: An Essay on Psychology, Society and Politics,
Oxford University Press, 1992, Philosophy and
Phenomenological Research 55(1995) 689—699.
[JSTOR]
- Review of
John McDowell, Mind and World, Harvard University
Press, 1994. In Philosophical Books
38(1997) 169—177, with reply by McDowell.
- Starving the theological
cuckoo. A review of John Leslie,
Infinite Minds: A Philosophical Cosmology (OUP,
2001). In Spontaneous Generations, A Journal for the History and Philosophy of Science 1(2007) 136—145. [PDF available here]
This review was commissioned by the London Review of
Books in 2002, but rejected by the commissioning
editor, John Sturrock, apparently because he disliked its
anti-theological stance; see the Author's Note at the
end of the present version for more details.
- Blackburn and the War on
Error. A discussion review of Simon Blackburn's
Truth: A Guide for the Perplexed, London: Allen
Lane, 2005. In Australasian Journal of
Philosophy 84(2006) 603—614. [PDF]
[Top]
Selected minor reviews
- Review of Peter
Coveney and Roger Highfield, The Arrow of Time
(W.H.Allen, 1990) and Paul Halpern, Time Journeys
(McGraw-Hill, 1990), from Nature 348 (22
November, 1990), 356.
- 'Brains in Spain',
a review of J. J. Halliwell, J. Pérez-Mercader and
W. H. Zurek (eds.), Physical Origins of Time
Asymmetry, Cambridge University Press, 1994. Pp. xx +
515. $190.00 HB. From Metascience 7:1995,
179—182.
- 'No
Direction Known', a review of Ilya Prigogine, The
End of Certainty (Free Press/Simon and Schuster,
1997) and Derek York, In Search of Lost Time (IOP
Publishing, 1997), for Nature, 6 November, 1997,
42.
- Review of L. S. Schulman, Time's Arrows and
Quantum Measurement, Cambridge University Press,
1997. In The British Journal for the Philosophy of
Science, 49(1998) 522—525. [JSTOR]
- Review of
David Albert, Time and Chance, Harvard University
Press, 2000. In The Times Literary Supplement, 14
April, 2002.
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Last updated: 23.03.2008
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