Works by Tomkow, Terrance A. (exact spelling)

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  1. The dif.Kadri Vihvelin & Terrance A. Tomkow - 2006 - Journal of Philosophy 103 (4):183-205.
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  2. The Temporal Asymmetry of Counterfactuals.Terrance A. Tomkow & Kadri Vihvelin - manuscript
  3. Causation.Terrance A. Tomkow & Kadri Vihvelin - manuscript
    Causation is defined as a relation between facts: C causes E if and only if C and E are nomologically independent facts and C is a necessary part of a nomologically sufficient condition for E. The analysis is applied to problems of overdetermination, preemption, trumping, intransitivity, switching, and double prevention. Preventing and allowing are defined and distinguished from causing. The analysis explains the direction of causation in terms of the logical form of dynamic laws. Even in a universe that is (...)
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  4. Counterfactuals, Irreversible Laws and The Direction of Time.Terrance A. Tomkow - manuscript
    The principle of Information Conservation or Determinism is a governing assumption of physical theory. Determinism has counterfactual consequences. It entails that if the present were different, then the future would be different. But determinism is temporally symmetric: it entails that if the present were different, the past would also have to be different. This runs contrary to our commonsense intuition that what has happened in the future depends on the past in a way the past does not depend on the (...)
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  5. What is Grammar?Terrance A. Tomkow - 1980 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy, Supplementary Volume 6:61.
  6.  17
    What is Grammar?Terrance A. Tomkow - 1980 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 10 (sup1):61-82.
    While there is agreement that it is the central task of semantics to give the semantic interpretation of every sentence in the language, nowhere in the linguistic literature will one find, so far as I know, a straightforward account of how a theory performs this task, or how to tell when it has been accomplished. The contrast with syntax is striking. The main Job of a modest syntax is to characterizemeaningfulness. We may have as much confidence in the correctness of (...)
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