James F. Ross is a creative and independent thinker in contemporary
metaphysics and philosophy of mind. In this concise metaphysical essay,
he argues clearly and analytically that meaning, truth, impossibility,
natural necessity, and our intelligent perception of nature fit together
into a distinctly realist account of thought and world. Ross articulates
a moderate realism about repeatable natural structures and our
abstractive ability to discern them that poses a challenge to many of
the common assumptions and claims of contemporary analytic philosophy.
He develops a broadly Aristotelian metaphysics that recognizes the
"hidden necessities" of things, which are disclosed through the
sciences, which ground his account of real impossibility as a kind of
vacuity, and which require the immateriality of the human ability to
understand. Those ideas are supported by a novel account of false
judgment. Ross aims to offer an analytically and historically
respectable alternative to the prevailing positions of many
British-American philosophers.