Henry Laycock (laycock-h)
My contributions to Philosophie.ch
No contributions yet
Bibliography
Laycock, Henry. 1972. “Some Questions of Ontology.” The
Philosophical Review 81(1): 3–42.
Laycock, Henry. 1975. “Theories of Matter.” Synthese
31(3–4): 411–442. Reprinted in Pelletier (1979, 89–120).
Laycock, Henry. 1989. “Matter and Objecthood Disentangled.”
Dialogue. Revue canadienne de philosophie / Canadian Philosophical
Review 28(1): 17–22.
Laycock, Henry. 2002.
“Object.” in The
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Stanford, California:
The Metaphysics Research Lab, Center for the Study of Language;
Information, https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2002/entries/object/.
Laycock, Henry. 2005. “Some Questions of Ontology.” Analysis
and Metaphysics 4(2).
Laycock, Henry. 2006a. Words Without Objects. Semantics, Ontology and Logic for
Non-Singularity. Oxford: Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/0199281718.001.0001.
Laycock, Henry. 2006b. “Variables, Generality and Existence: Considerations on
the Notation of a Concept-Script.” in Topics on General and Formal Ontology, edited
by Paolo Valore, pp. 27–52. Monza:
Polimetrica.
Laycock, Henry. 2006c.
“Object.” in The
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Stanford, California:
The Metaphysics Research Lab, Center for the Study of Language;
Information, https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2006/entries/object/.
Laycock, Henry. 2010a.
“Object.” in The
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Stanford, California:
The Metaphysics Research Lab, Center for the Study of Language;
Information, https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/fall2010/entries/object/.
Laycock, Henry. 2010b. “Mass Nouns, Count Nouns, and Non-count Nouns:
Philosophical Aspects.” in Concise Encyclopedia of Philosophy of Language and
Linguistics, edited by Alex Barber and Robert J. Stainton, pp. 417–421. Amsterdam: Elsevier
Science Publishers B.V.
Laycock, Henry. 2011. “Any Sum of Parts which are Water is Water.”
Humana.Mente 4(19): 41–55.
Laycock, Henry. 2012. “The Matter of Objects.” in The
Logica Yearbook 2011, edited by Michal Peliš and Vı́t Punčochář, pp. 121–140. London: College
Publications.
Further References
Pelletier, Francis Jeffry, ed. 1979.
Mass Terms: Some Philosophical Problems.
Synthese Language Library n. 6. Dordrecht: D. Reidel
Publishing Co., doi:10.1007/978-1-4020-4110-5.