This is Greg Restall’s website, with news, writings, pictures, and links. For background see below.

… Iona, Glasgow, Oxford.

Tuesday, August 30, 2005 at 11:25AM

Phew! We’re back in Oxford, and arrived in our house today. We’re in a cute little 2 bedroom house in the northern outskirts of Oxford, a quick busride down Banbury Road into Wolfson or the centre of town. I’m currently dealing with some of the backlog of email in a Starbucks (of all places!) with a wireless network. The week at Iona was great. I’ll write an extended post about it in a little while. For now I have lots of other things to do to make the cute little house a bit more like a home, and figuring out how to best use my worktime for the best mix of reading, writing, going to seminars, giving talks, etc., etc. (That and figuring out how I’ll live without internet access at home.)

More later.

About

I’m Greg Restall, and this is my website. I work in Philosophy at the University of Melbourne. Email: greg at consequently.org; Post: School of of Philosophy, Anthropology and Social Inquiry, University of Melbourne, Parkville 3010, Australia.

Start at the home page—a summary of the site. The left column is news, archived on the news archive page. The central column is for photos, archived on the occasional photos page. The right column contains recent items from the writing page, which lists my publications. These are also categorised by topic. You can follow my links at my account on delicious and occasional short snarky remarks at @consequently on twitter.

Current CO2 concentration in the atmosphere

To subscribe to this site, either read the full feed  of everything, the feed of news items only , or the feed of writing items only , which is also great for podcasting pdfs automatically.

This site is handcoded: I write text in Textmate, and Webby files things in the right place and uploads them to the server. This page was last modified on 2009-01-07 at 12:04PM.

Thought

When I started writing this book, I intended to explain in the preface that this was the history of epistemology since Kant, the way Carnap would have written it had he been Hegel.
— Alberto Coffa’s preface to The Semantic Tradition from Kant to Carnap.