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  1. Penelope Mackie (1953–2022) ( / ˈmæki /) was a British philosopher who specialised in metaphysics and philosophical logic, and was best known for her work on essence and modality.

  2. Jan 3, 2023 · Her best-known work is her 2006 book, How Things Might Have Been. In it, she defends the view that objects have bare identities. A person, or any other object, simply is the thing it is and could not have been any other, although it could have been some radically different kind of thing.

  3. Penelope Mackie (1953-2022) was a long-time member and former Head of the Department of Philosophy at the University of Nottingham. Her philosophical contributions span the areas of (1) essence, modality, identity; (2) philosophy of mind; (3) causation and counterfactuals; and (4) free will and determinism.

  4. Our sad loss of Penelope Mackie. It is with great sadness that the Department of Philosophy announces that our friend and colleague Penelope Mackie died on Monday 5th December, following a period of illness.

  5. Dec 29, 2022 · Penelope Mackie, a philosopher at the University of Nottingham, has died. The following obituary was provided by Mark Jago (Nottingham). It is with great sadness that we announce the death of our friend and colleague, Penelope Mackie, following a period of illness.

  6. Dec 21, 2022 · In Memoriam: Penelope Mackie (1953-2022) MOVING TO FRONT FROM DECEMBER 15-UPDATED WITH BIRTH YEAR. A well-known contributor to metaphysics, Professor Mackie spent most of her career at the University of Nottingham, where she was Associate Professor/Reader in Philosophy. I will add links to memorial notices as they appear.

  7. Penelope Mackie is an associate professor at Nottingham University, Department of Philosophy. Follow them to stay up to date with their professional activities in philosophy, and browse their publications such as "Transworld identity", "Perception, Mind-Independence, and Berkeley", and "Sortal concepts and essential properties".