Niall Connolly
School of History, Philosophy and Digital Humanities
University Teacher in Philosophy
Director of Undergraduate Studies
Full contact details
School of History, Philosophy and Digital Humanities
9 Mappin Street
Sheffield
S1 4DT
- Profile
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I got my PhD in philosophy from King's College London after studying maths and philosophy as an undergraduate in Trinity College Dublin. My research interests are chiefly in metaphysics, the philosophy of language and philosophical logic; though I am also interested in topics the philosophy of science and the history of early modern philosophy. I have written on non-existence, time and change, truth, substances and their properties, and the semantics of names and indexicals. I am particularly interested at the moment in varieties of fictionalism and in passing off controversial alleged entities as bare particulars.
- Publications
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Journal articles
- Modal Meinongianism doesn’t exist. Grazer Philosophische Studien, 100(4), 586-598. View this article in WRRO
- Fictional Resistance and Real Feelings. Thought: A Journal of Philosophy, 11(2), 106-113. View this article in WRRO
- Fictional characters and characterisations. Pacific Philosophical Quarterly.
- I'm Here Now, But I Won't Be Here When You Get This Message. Dialectica , 71(4), 603-622. View this article in WRRO
- Yes: Bare Particulars!. Philosophical Studies, 172(5), 1355-1370. View this article in WRRO
- Truth As, At Most, One. International Journal of Philosophical Studies, 20(1), 135-147.
- How the Dead Live. Philosophia, 39(1), 83-103.
Book reviews
- Book Review. The Objects of Thought. Tim Crane. The Philosophical Quarterly, 64(256), 517-520. View this article in WRRO
- Christopher Belshaw, Annihilation, The Sense and Significance of Death. The Journal of Value Inquiry, 44(3), 407-411.
- Modal Meinongianism doesn’t exist. Grazer Philosophische Studien, 100(4), 586-598. View this article in WRRO