Paul's principal research interests are in metaphysics and the philosophy of mind. Her work focuses on causation, mereology, the philosophy of time, and related topics in phenomenology, the philosophy of science, and philosophy of language. Her work in ontology and mereology develops a distinctive view of objects as fusions of property instances.[6] Her article "What You Can't Expect When You're Expecting" develops the notion of transformative experience and explores its consequences for the possibility of rational decision-making.[7][8][9]
She has written more than twenty articles, and is the editor of Causation and Counterfactuals, co-author of Causation: A User's Guide, and author of Transformative Experience.
2010. "Temporal Experience". The Journal of Philosophy CVII (7) 333–359. Reprinted in The Future of the Philosophy of Time, edited by Adrian Bardon. New York: Routledge (2012).
2010. "The Counterfactual Analysis of Causation". In The Oxford Handbook on Causation, edited by Helen Beebee, Christopher Hitchcock and Peter Menzies, Oxford University Press, ISBN978-0199279739.
2006. "Coincidence as Overlap". Noûs, 40: 623–649.
2004. Causation and Counterfactuals. Co-edited with Ned Hall and John Collins. MIT Press, ISBN978-0-26253-2563.
2002. "Logical Parts". Noûs, 36: 578–596. Reprinted in Metaphysics volume v, edited by Michael Rea. Routledge 2008, ISBN978-0-415-39751-3.
1999. Essays on Causation. Princeton University
References
^ abPaul, L. A. "L.A. Paul"(PDF). L. A. Paul. Retrieved 6 November 2021.