Biography:Matthew W. McKeon

From HandWiki
Short description: American philosopher

Matthew W. McKeon is the chair of the philosophy department at Michigan State University and well known philosopher of logic. McKeon earned his Ph.D. in philosophy at The University of Connecticut in 1994.[1] He teaches courses in Logic and Philosophy of Language.

Contributions to philosophy

McKeon's work primarily focuses on Logic and Philosophy of Language, Metaphysics, Epistemology, History of Early Twentieth Century Analytic Philosophy, and Philosophy of Mathematics.[2]

Professional publications

He has published numerous peer-reviewed articles in journals such as Synthese,[3] Journal of Philosophical Logic, [4] and History and Philosophy of Logic.[5] He also published the book The Concept of Logical Consequence (American University Studies V: Philosophy) in 2010.[6]

Awards and distinctions

McKeon was a participant in the NEH Summer Seminar, "Proofs and Refutations in Mathematics Today," from June 25 to August 3 of 2001 at Case Western Reserve University and was awarded an IRGP (MSU intramural) grant in 2003.[7]

Selected works

  • “On the Substitutional Characterization of First-Order Logical Truth, ” New York: Lang Publishing(2010)
  • “A Plea for Logical Objects,” Synthese 167, 163-182 (2009).
  • “A Defense of the Kripkean Account of Logical Truth in First-Order Modal Logic,” Journal of Philosophical Logic 34, 305-326 (2005).
  • “On The Substitutional Approach to Logical Consequence” 411-446 in Mistakes of Reasoning: Essays in Honour of John Woods. Ed. A. Irvine and K. Peacocke. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, (2005).
  • “Logic and Existential Commitment,” Logique et Analyse 47, 409-423 (2004).
  • “On the Substitutional Characterization of First-Order Logical Truth, ” History and Philosophy of Logic 25, 195-214 (2004).
  • “Models, Validity, and Possible Worlds,” 153-166 in Logical Consequence: Rival Approaches. Ed. by J. Woods and B. Brown. Oxford: Hermes Science Publishing Ltd., (2001).
  • “Bertrand Russell and Logical Truth,” Philosophia 27, 481-493 (1999).

See also

References

  1. Michigan State University/philosophy/Matthew W. McKeon/CV accessed June 6th, (2011)
  2. Michigan State University/philosophy/Matthew W. McKeon/CV accessed June 6th, (2011)
  3. McKeon, Matthew. “A Plea for Logical Objects,” Synthese 167, 163-182 (2009)
  4. McKeon, Matthew. “A Defense of the Kripkean Account of Logical Truth in First-Order Modal Logic,” Journal of Philosophical Logic 34, 305-326 (2005)
  5. McKeon, Matthew. “On the Substitutional Characterization of First-Order Logical Truth, ” History and Philosophy of Logic 25, 195-214 (2004)
  6. McKeon, Matthew. “On the Substitutional Characterization of First-Order Logical Truth, ” New York: Lang Publishing(2010)
  7. Michigan State University/philosophy/Matthew W. McKeon/CV accessed June 6th, (2011)