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Roderick Milton Chisholm (/ˈtʃɪzəm/; November 27, 1916 – January 19, 1999) was an American philosopher known for his work on epistemology, metaphysics, free will, value theory, deontology, deontic logic and the philosophy of perception.
Roderick Chisholm | |
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![]() Chisholm, c. 1955 | |
Born | Roderick Milton Chisholm November 27, 1916 North Attleboro, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Died | January 19, 1999 Providence, Rhode Island, U.S. | (aged 82)
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Brown University Harvard University |
Era | 20th-century philosophy |
Region | Western philosophy |
School | Analytic philosophy |
Institutions | Brown University |
Thesis | The Basic Propositions of the Theory of Knowledge (1942) |
Doctoral advisor | C. I. Lewis, D. C. Williams |
Doctoral students | Richard Cartwright,Dale Jacquette,Charles Taliaferro,Dean Zimmerman,Richard Taylor |
Main interests | Epistemology Metaphysics |
Notable ideas | Direct attribution theory of reference, contrary-to-fact conditional, latitudinarianism |
Richard and Fred Feldman, writing in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, remark that he "is widely regarded as one of the most creative, productive, and influential American philosophers of the 20th Century."
Life and career
Chisholm graduated from Brown University in 1938 and received his Ph.D. at Harvard University in 1942 under Clarence Irving Lewis and D. C. Williams. He was drafted into the United States Army in July 1942 and did basic training at Fort McClellan in Alabama. Chisholm administered psychological tests in Boston and New Haven. In 1943 he married Eleanor Parker, whom he had met as an undergraduate at Brown. He spent his academic career at Brown University and served as president of the Metaphysical Society of America in 1973.
He was editor of Philosophy and Phenomenological Research from 1980 until 1986.
Chisholm trained many distinguished philosophers, including Selmer Bringsjord, Fred Feldman, Keith Lehrer, James Francis Ross, Richard Taylor, and Dean Zimmerman. He also had a significant influence on many colleagues, including Jaegwon Kim and Ernest Sosa.
Philosophical work
Chisholm's first major work was Perceiving (1957). His epistemological views were summed up in a popular text, Theory of Knowledge, which appeared in three very different editions (1966, 1977, and 1989). His masterwork was Person and Object, its title deliberately contrasting with W. V. O. Quine's Word and Object. Chisholm was a metaphysical Platonist in the tradition of Bertrand Russell, and a rationalist in the tradition of Russell, G. E. Moore, and Franz Brentano; he objected to Quine's anti-realism, behaviorism, and relativism.
Chisholm defended the possibility of empirical knowledge by appeal to a priori epistemic principles whose consequences include that it is more reasonable to trust your senses and memory in most situations than to doubt them. His theory of knowledge was also famously "foundationalist" in character: all justified beliefs are either "directly evident" or supported by chains of justified beliefs that ultimately lead to beliefs that are directly evident. He also defended a controversial theory of volition called "agent causation" much like that of Thomas Reid. He argued that free will is incompatible with determinism, and believed that we do act freely; this combination of views is known as libertarianism.
He developed a highly original theory of first person thought according to which the things we believe are properties, and believing them is a matter of self-attributing them. (A similar view was developed independently by David Kellogg Lewis, and enjoys considerable popularity, although it is now known mainly through Lewis's work.) Chisholm was also famous for defending the possibility of robust self-knowledge (against the skeptical arguments of David Hume), and an objective ethics of requirements similar to that of W. D. Ross. Chisholm's other books include The Problem of the Criterion, Perceiving, The First Person and A Realist Theory of the Categories, though his numerous journal articles are probably better known than any of these.
Chisholm read widely in the history of philosophy, and frequently referred to the work of Ancient, Medieval, Modern, and even Continental philosophers (although the use he made of this material has sometimes been challenged). Nonetheless, he greatly respected the history of philosophy, in the face of a prevailing indifference among Analytic philosophers. Chisholm translated some work by Brentano and by Husserl, and contributed to the post-1970 renaissance of mereology.
Direct attribution theory of reference
Chisholm argued for the primacy of the mental over linguistic intentionality, as suggested in the title of Person and Object (1976) that was deliberately contrasted with Quine's Word and Object (1960). In this regard, he defended the direct attribution theory of reference in The First Person (1981). He argues that we refer to things other than ourselves by indirectly attributing properties to them, and that we indirectly or relatively attribute properties to them by directly attributing properties to ourselves. Suppose the following bed scene:
- (1) a man M is in bed B with a woman W, namely, M-B-W, or
- (2) a woman W is in bed B with a man M, namely, W-B-M.
If I were M and "U" were W, then I could directly attribute to myself the property (1) or M-B-W, while indirectly to "U" the property (2) or W-B-M, thereby referring to "U". That is, to say (1) is relatively to say (2), or to explicate M-B-W is to implicate W-B-M.
His idea of indirect attribution (1981) is relevant to John Searle's "indirect speech act" (1975) and Paul Grice's "implicature" (1975), in addition to entailment.
"Chisholming"
Stylistically, Chisholm was known for formulating definitions and subsequently revising them in the light of counterexamples. This led to a joke definition of a new verb:
chisholm, v. To make repeated small alterations in a definition or example. "He started with definition (d.8) and kept chisholming away at it until he ended up with (d.8′′′′′′′′)."
— Daniel Dennett and Asbjørn Steglich-Petersen, The Philosophical Lexicon, 2008
While intended as a joke, the term has found some use in serious philosophical papers (for example, Kevin Meeker's "Chisholming away at Plantinga's critique of epistemic deontology").
Persistence and Identity
In his book Person and Object, Chisholm endorses a mereological essentialism for everyday objects such as tables and chairs. He distinguishes two ways of thinking about identity of such objects and the way in which they may lose or gain parts over time: a "strict philosophical sense" and a "loose sense." In a strict philosophical sense, we must say that everyday vulgar objects do not persist through even the slightest change of parts. This is a strict mereological essentialist view. If any part of an everyday or 'vulgar' object is lost or gained over time, the object would cease to exist. (See Chisholm's Stanford Encyclopedia entry for more about vulgar objects). The object from before is now a new and different one. Chisholm argues that these vulgar objects persist through time only in a philosophically loose sense. If we consider these objects carefully, they are better understood as merely feigning identity, what Chisholm calls "ontological parasites" or ens per alio. If we consider a table in which we change out individual parts each day for a week, we may at the end of the week say there has only been one table in front of us; however, this is only the loose way of talking. The single 'table' we are referring to in that sentence is really only (Chisholm borrowing a phrase from Hume) a 'succession of related objects.' The single "table" we refer to plays loose with identity. In a strict philosophical sense, if the table has had seven changes to its parts, there have been seven different tables. We may innocently discuss much of the world around us as persisting through change in the loose sense, but when we consider strict philosophical puzzles, we must not be fooled by ontological parasites.
Chisholm considers this theory with the famous philosophical puzzle of The Ship of Theseus. According to mereological essentialism, once a single plank of the ship is removed, the ship has become a different object. We may continue to talk about the Ship of Theseus as if it persisted, but this would only be in the loose sense discussed above. Chisholm solves the puzzle by saying that, in the strict and philosophical sense, there is no persistence between the mereologically different objects. Note the possible implication for the "reconstructed ship" that is often a part of the thought experiment. If every single part of the original ship were saved perfectly, so that they were materially identical, and rebuilt next to the new ship, Chisholm's mereological essentialism may lead him to agree that this is the original Ship of Theseus.
However, Chisholm's mereological essentialism does not extend to persons. Persons, unlike everyday vulgar material objects like ships and tables, persist in the strict and philosophical sense, even when they change their parts. This runs counter to his mereological essentialism in vulgar objects. He provides various arguments for why there is such a dividing line between the two and why persons are special. One argument is from the first hand experience of the unity of consciousness. He argues that these evidences, first person reporting and consciousness, are strong and should be innocent until proven guilty. He offers thought experiments as evidence including the surgery example and the use of Leibniz's Law (Identity of indiscernibles).
The surgery thought experiment (attributed to Charles Sanders Peirce) runs like this. Imagine you could save a substantial amount of money by undergoing surgery without an anesthesia. Instead, you will be given drugs afterwards that cause amnesia of the whole experience. You ask your friends and family what to do and they encourage you to skip the anesthesia and save the money. They have come up with a solution to help you avoid the pain of undergoing the surgery fully aware:
"Have no fear,” they will say. “Take the cheaper operation and we will take care of everything. We will lay down the convention that the man on the table is not you, Jones, but is Smith.” What ought to be obvious to you, it seems to me, is that the laying down of this convention should have no effect at all upon your decision. For you may still ask, “But won’t that person be I?” and, it seems to me, the question has an answer.
Chisholm's point is that our identity and persistence as person is not like the mere convention of the loose persistence of vulgar objects. Regardless of the convention, you will still experience the pain of the surgery. This is meant to strengthen his position that person's have strict philosophical persistence and are ens per se and not merely ens per alio. Persons are entities in themselves; vulgar objects are merely entities through another, or by entities by mere convention. Hence, if this thought experiment provides the intuition that we are not mere conventions, then mereological essentialism must be false for persons.
A second thought experiment is modal. It asks whether I, as a person, can persist with my identity through the loss of a hand. The answer according to first person reporting and the experience of consciousness is yes. If I have survived the loss of my hand (a mereological part) then mereological essentialism cannot hold for persons. This applies to Leibniz's Law in the following way. If my body were identical to its collection of parts then the collection of parts could not survive the loss of my hand. Leibniz's Law therefore implies that either I must not merely be the collection of parts that was my body or I am no longer myself. The evidence of consciousness rules out the latter; therefore, mereological essentialism must be false for persons. If mereological essentialism held for persons, then I would have been annihilated along with my hand.
Bibliography
- Perceiving: A Philosophical Study (Ithaca: Cornell University Press), 1957.
- Realism and the Background of Phenomenology (Free Press), 1960.
- Chisholm delivered the Lindley Lecture at the University of Kansas on 23 April 1964, on "human freedom and the self". The Lindley Lecture Series was instituted at the University in memory of Ernest H. Lindley, who was Chancellor there from 1920 to 1939.
- Person and Object: A Metaphysical Study (London: G. Allen & Unwin), 1976.
- Essays on the Philosophy of Roderick M. Chisholm (ed. R.M. Chisholm and Ernest Sosa. Amsterdam: Rodopi), 1979.
- The First Person: An Essay on Reference and Intentionality (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press), 1981.
- The Foundations of Knowing (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press), 1982.
- Brentano and Meinong Studies (Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Humanities Press), 1982.
- Brentano and Intrinsic Value (New York: Cambridge University Press), 1986.
- Roderick M. Chisholm (ed. Radu J. Bogdan. Boston: D. Reidel Publishing Company), 1986.
- On Metaphysics (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press), 1989.
- Theory of Knowledge (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall), 1st ed. 1966, 2nd ed. 1977, 3rd ed. 1989.
- "The Nature of Epistemic Principles", Noûs 24: 209–16, 1990.
- "On the Simplicity of the Soul", Philosophical Perspectives 5: 157–81, 1991.
- "Agents, Causes, and Events: The Problem of Free Will" in: Timothy O'Connor, ed. Agents, Causes, and Events: Essays on Indeterminism and Free Will (New York: Oxford University Press): 95–100, 1995.
- A Realistic Theory of Categories: An Essay on Ontology (New York: Cambridge University Press), 1996.
See also
- American philosophy
- List of American philosophers
Notes
- John R. Shook (ed.), Dictionary of Modern American Philosophers, Bloomsbury Publishing, 2005, p. 444.
- Rescher, Nicholas. "Obituary, Dale Jacquette". Austrian Ludwig Wittgenstein Society. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
- "Taliaferro, Charles". Brown University Theses and Dissertations. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
- "Zimmerman, Dean Wallace". Brown University Theses and Dissertations. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
- Dictionary of Modern American Philosophers (2005), p. 475.
- Feldman, Richard; Feldman, Fred (2021), "Roderick Chisholm", in Zalta, Edward N.; Nodelman, Uri (eds.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2021 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved 21 January 2024
- Chisholm, Roderick (1997). "My Philosophical Development". The philosophy of Roderick M. Chisholm. Chicago: Open Court. pp. 1–9. ISBN 0-8126-9357-4.
- Feldman, Richard and Feldman, Fred, "Roderick Chisholm", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2008 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.), http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2008/entries/chisholm/
- Kevin Meeker. Chisholming away at Plantinga's critique of epistemic deontology. Australasian Journal of Philosophy. Volume 76, Issue 1, 1998, pp. 90-96
- Chisholm, Roderick (1976). Person and Object. Open Court.
- Chisholm, Roderick (1991). "On the Simplicity of the Soul". Philosophical Perspectives. 5: 157–181. doi:10.2307/2214094. JSTOR 2214094.
- Chisholm, R. M., Human Freedom and the Self, University of Kansas, accessed 9 February 2024
- University of Kansas, Lindley Lecture Series, accessed 9 February 2024
References
- Hahn, L. E., ed., 1997. The Philosophy of Roderick Chisholm (The Library of Living Philosophers). Open Court. Includes an autobiographical essay and a complete bibliography.
- "Roderick M. Chisholm" (Dean Zimmerman, ), in Companion to Analytic Philosophy, ed. by David Sosa and (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 2001), pp. 281–295
- "On the Simplicity of the Soul," Philosophical Perspectives 5: 157–81, 1991.
- Person and Object: A Metaphysical Study (London: G. Allen & Unwin), 1976.
External links
- Feldman, Richard; Feldman, Fred. "Roderick Chisholm". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
- Information Philosopher on Roderick Chisholm on Free Will
- "On Roderick M. Chisholm" by Matthew Davidson (preprint of article published in Philosophy Now]
- "CHISHOLM, RODERICK M." by Richard Foley (preprint of entry in the Encyclopedia of Philosophy: Cabanis - Destutt de Tracy)
- Chisholm: Epistemology, Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Roderick Milton Chisholm ˈ tʃ ɪ z e m November 27 1916 January 19 1999 was an American philosopher known for his work on epistemology metaphysics free will value theory deontology deontic logic and the philosophy of perception Roderick ChisholmChisholm c 1955BornRoderick Milton Chisholm 1916 11 27 November 27 1916 North Attleboro Massachusetts U S DiedJanuary 19 1999 1999 01 19 aged 82 Providence Rhode Island U S NationalityAmericanAlma materBrown University Harvard UniversityEra20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolAnalytic philosophyInstitutionsBrown UniversityThesisThe Basic Propositions of the Theory of Knowledge 1942 Doctoral advisorC I Lewis D C WilliamsDoctoral studentsRichard Cartwright Dale Jacquette Charles Taliaferro Dean Zimmerman Richard TaylorMain interestsEpistemology MetaphysicsNotable ideasDirect attribution theory of reference contrary to fact conditional latitudinarianism Richard and Fred Feldman writing in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy remark that he is widely regarded as one of the most creative productive and influential American philosophers of the 20th Century Life and careerChisholm graduated from Brown University in 1938 and received his Ph D at Harvard University in 1942 under Clarence Irving Lewis and D C Williams He was drafted into the United States Army in July 1942 and did basic training at Fort McClellan in Alabama Chisholm administered psychological tests in Boston and New Haven In 1943 he married Eleanor Parker whom he had met as an undergraduate at Brown He spent his academic career at Brown University and served as president of the Metaphysical Society of America in 1973 He was editor of Philosophy and Phenomenological Research from 1980 until 1986 Chisholm trained many distinguished philosophers including Selmer Bringsjord Fred Feldman Keith Lehrer James Francis Ross Richard Taylor and Dean Zimmerman He also had a significant influence on many colleagues including Jaegwon Kim and Ernest Sosa Philosophical workChisholm s first major work was Perceiving 1957 His epistemological views were summed up in a popular text Theory of Knowledge which appeared in three very different editions 1966 1977 and 1989 His masterwork was Person and Object its title deliberately contrasting with W V O Quine s Word and Object Chisholm was a metaphysical Platonist in the tradition of Bertrand Russell and a rationalist in the tradition of Russell G E Moore and Franz Brentano he objected to Quine s anti realism behaviorism and relativism Chisholm defended the possibility of empirical knowledge by appeal to a priori epistemic principles whose consequences include that it is more reasonable to trust your senses and memory in most situations than to doubt them His theory of knowledge was also famously foundationalist in character all justified beliefs are either directly evident or supported by chains of justified beliefs that ultimately lead to beliefs that are directly evident He also defended a controversial theory of volition called agent causation much like that of Thomas Reid He argued that free will is incompatible with determinism and believed that we do act freely this combination of views is known as libertarianism He developed a highly original theory of first person thought according to which the things we believe are properties and believing them is a matter of self attributing them A similar view was developed independently by David Kellogg Lewis and enjoys considerable popularity although it is now known mainly through Lewis s work Chisholm was also famous for defending the possibility of robust self knowledge against the skeptical arguments of David Hume and an objective ethics of requirements similar to that of W D Ross Chisholm s other books include The Problem of the Criterion Perceiving The First Person and A Realist Theory of the Categories though his numerous journal articles are probably better known than any of these Chisholm read widely in the history of philosophy and frequently referred to the work of Ancient Medieval Modern and even Continental philosophers although the use he made of this material has sometimes been challenged Nonetheless he greatly respected the history of philosophy in the face of a prevailing indifference among Analytic philosophers Chisholm translated some work by Brentano and by Husserl and contributed to the post 1970 renaissance of mereology Direct attribution theory of reference Chisholm argued for the primacy of the mental over linguistic intentionality as suggested in the title of Person and Object 1976 that was deliberately contrasted with Quine s Word and Object 1960 In this regard he defended the direct attribution theory of reference in The First Person 1981 He argues that we refer to things other than ourselves by indirectly attributing properties to them and that we indirectly or relatively attribute properties to them by directly attributing properties to ourselves Suppose the following bed scene 1 a man M is in bed B with a woman W namely M B W or 2 a woman W is in bed B with a man M namely W B M If I were M and U were W then I could directly attribute to myself the property 1 or M B W while indirectly to U the property 2 or W B M thereby referring to U That is to say 1 is relatively to say 2 or to explicate M B W is to implicate W B M His idea of indirect attribution 1981 is relevant to John Searle s indirect speech act 1975 and Paul Grice s implicature 1975 in addition to entailment Chisholming Stylistically Chisholm was known for formulating definitions and subsequently revising them in the light of counterexamples This led to a joke definition of a new verb chisholm v To make repeated small alterations in a definition or example He started with definition d 8 and kept chisholming away at it until he ended up with d 8 Daniel Dennett and Asbjorn Steglich Petersen The Philosophical Lexicon 2008 While intended as a joke the term has found some use in serious philosophical papers for example Kevin Meeker s Chisholming away at Plantinga s critique of epistemic deontology Persistence and IdentityIn his book Person and Object Chisholm endorses a mereological essentialism for everyday objects such as tables and chairs He distinguishes two ways of thinking about identity of such objects and the way in which they may lose or gain parts over time a strict philosophical sense and a loose sense In a strict philosophical sense we must say that everyday vulgar objects do not persist through even the slightest change of parts This is a strict mereological essentialist view If any part of an everyday or vulgar object is lost or gained over time the object would cease to exist See Chisholm s Stanford Encyclopedia entry for more about vulgar objects The object from before is now a new and different one Chisholm argues that these vulgar objects persist through time only in a philosophically loose sense If we consider these objects carefully they are better understood as merely feigning identity what Chisholm calls ontological parasites or ens per alio If we consider a table in which we change out individual parts each day for a week we may at the end of the week say there has only been one table in front of us however this is only the loose way of talking The single table we are referring to in that sentence is really only Chisholm borrowing a phrase from Hume a succession of related objects The single table we refer to plays loose with identity In a strict philosophical sense if the table has had seven changes to its parts there have been seven different tables We may innocently discuss much of the world around us as persisting through change in the loose sense but when we consider strict philosophical puzzles we must not be fooled by ontological parasites Chisholm considers this theory with the famous philosophical puzzle of The Ship of Theseus According to mereological essentialism once a single plank of the ship is removed the ship has become a different object We may continue to talk about the Ship of Theseus as if it persisted but this would only be in the loose sense discussed above Chisholm solves the puzzle by saying that in the strict and philosophical sense there is no persistence between the mereologically different objects Note the possible implication for the reconstructed ship that is often a part of the thought experiment If every single part of the original ship were saved perfectly so that they were materially identical and rebuilt next to the new ship Chisholm s mereological essentialism may lead him to agree that this is the original Ship of Theseus However Chisholm s mereological essentialism does not extend to persons Persons unlike everyday vulgar material objects like ships and tables persist in the strict and philosophical sense even when they change their parts This runs counter to his mereological essentialism in vulgar objects He provides various arguments for why there is such a dividing line between the two and why persons are special One argument is from the first hand experience of the unity of consciousness He argues that these evidences first person reporting and consciousness are strong and should be innocent until proven guilty He offers thought experiments as evidence including the surgery example and the use of Leibniz s Law Identity of indiscernibles The surgery thought experiment attributed to Charles Sanders Peirce runs like this Imagine you could save a substantial amount of money by undergoing surgery without an anesthesia Instead you will be given drugs afterwards that cause amnesia of the whole experience You ask your friends and family what to do and they encourage you to skip the anesthesia and save the money They have come up with a solution to help you avoid the pain of undergoing the surgery fully aware Have no fear they will say Take the cheaper operation and we will take care of everything We will lay down the convention that the man on the table is not you Jones but is Smith What ought to be obvious to you it seems to me is that the laying down of this convention should have no effect at all upon your decision For you may still ask But won t that person be I and it seems to me the question has an answer Chisholm s point is that our identity and persistence as person is not like the mere convention of the loose persistence of vulgar objects Regardless of the convention you will still experience the pain of the surgery This is meant to strengthen his position that person s have strict philosophical persistence and are ens per se and not merely ens per alio Persons are entities in themselves vulgar objects are merely entities through another or by entities by mere convention Hence if this thought experiment provides the intuition that we are not mere conventions then mereological essentialism must be false for persons A second thought experiment is modal It asks whether I as a person can persist with my identity through the loss of a hand The answer according to first person reporting and the experience of consciousness is yes If I have survived the loss of my hand a mereological part then mereological essentialism cannot hold for persons This applies to Leibniz s Law in the following way If my body were identical to its collection of parts then the collection of parts could not survive the loss of my hand Leibniz s Law therefore implies that either I must not merely be the collection of parts that was my body or I am no longer myself The evidence of consciousness rules out the latter therefore mereological essentialism must be false for persons If mereological essentialism held for persons then I would have been annihilated along with my hand BibliographyPerceiving A Philosophical Study Ithaca Cornell University Press 1957 Realism and the Background of Phenomenology Free Press 1960 Chisholm delivered the Lindley Lecture at the University of Kansas on 23 April 1964 on human freedom and the self The Lindley Lecture Series was instituted at the University in memory of Ernest H Lindley who was Chancellor there from 1920 to 1939 Person and Object A Metaphysical Study London G Allen amp Unwin 1976 Essays on the Philosophy of Roderick M Chisholm ed R M Chisholm and Ernest Sosa Amsterdam Rodopi 1979 The First Person An Essay on Reference and Intentionality Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press 1981 The Foundations of Knowing Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press 1982 Brentano and Meinong Studies Atlantic Highlands N J Humanities Press 1982 Brentano and Intrinsic Value New York Cambridge University Press 1986 Roderick M Chisholm ed Radu J Bogdan Boston D Reidel Publishing Company 1986 On Metaphysics Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press 1989 Theory of Knowledge Englewood Cliffs N J Prentice Hall 1st ed 1966 2nd ed 1977 3rd ed 1989 The Nature of Epistemic Principles Nous 24 209 16 1990 On the Simplicity of the Soul Philosophical Perspectives 5 157 81 1991 Agents Causes and Events The Problem of Free Will in Timothy O Connor ed Agents Causes and Events Essays on Indeterminism and Free Will New York Oxford University Press 95 100 1995 A Realistic Theory of Categories An Essay on Ontology New York Cambridge University Press 1996 See alsoAmerican philosophy List of American philosophersNotesJohn R Shook ed Dictionary of Modern American Philosophers Bloomsbury Publishing 2005 p 444 Rescher Nicholas Obituary Dale Jacquette Austrian Ludwig Wittgenstein Society Retrieved 9 September 2020 Taliaferro Charles Brown University Theses and Dissertations Retrieved 9 September 2020 Zimmerman Dean Wallace Brown University Theses and Dissertations Retrieved 9 September 2020 Dictionary of Modern American Philosophers 2005 p 475 Feldman Richard Feldman Fred 2021 Roderick Chisholm in Zalta Edward N Nodelman Uri eds The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Summer 2021 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 21 January 2024 Chisholm Roderick 1997 My Philosophical Development The philosophy of Roderick M Chisholm Chicago Open Court pp 1 9 ISBN 0 8126 9357 4 Feldman Richard and Feldman Fred Roderick Chisholm The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2008 Edition Edward N Zalta ed http plato stanford edu archives win2008 entries chisholm Kevin Meeker Chisholming away at Plantinga s critique of epistemic deontology Australasian Journal of Philosophy Volume 76 Issue 1 1998 pp 90 96 Chisholm Roderick 1976 Person and Object Open Court Chisholm Roderick 1991 On the Simplicity of the Soul Philosophical Perspectives 5 157 181 doi 10 2307 2214094 JSTOR 2214094 Chisholm R M Human Freedom and the Self University of Kansas accessed 9 February 2024 University of Kansas Lindley Lecture Series accessed 9 February 2024ReferencesHahn L E ed 1997 The Philosophy of Roderick Chisholm The Library of Living Philosophers Open Court Includes an autobiographical essay and a complete bibliography Roderick M Chisholm Dean Zimmerman in Companion to Analytic Philosophy ed by David Sosa and Oxford Basil Blackwell 2001 pp 281 295 On the Simplicity of the Soul Philosophical Perspectives 5 157 81 1991 Person and Object A Metaphysical Study London G Allen amp Unwin 1976 External linksFeldman Richard Feldman Fred Roderick Chisholm In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Information Philosopher on Roderick Chisholm on Free Will On Roderick M Chisholm by Matthew Davidson preprint of article published in Philosophy Now CHISHOLM RODERICK M by Richard Foley preprint of entry in the Encyclopedia of Philosophy Cabanis Destutt de Tracy Chisholm Epistemology Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy