•  662
    Innateness and the sciences
    with Patrick Bateson
    Biology and Philosophy 21 (2): 155-188. 2006.
    The concept of innateness is a part of folk wisdom but is also used by biologists and cognitive scientists. This concept has a legitimate role to play in science only if the colloquial usage relates to a coherent body of evidence. We examine many different candidates for the post of scientific successor of the folk concept of innateness. We argue that none of these candidates is entirely satisfactory. Some of the candidates are more interesting and useful than others, but the interesting candidate…Read more
  •  41
    The American Journal of Bioethics, Volume 12, Issue 1, Page 39-40, January 2012
  •  32
    Epistocracy for Online Deliberative Bioethics
    with Giuseppe Schiavone and Giovanni Boniolo
    Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 24 (3): 272-280. 2015.
  •  13
    On Innateness
    Journal of Philosophy 105 (12): 719-736. 2008.
  •  94
    In the first part of the article, an account of moral judgment in terms of emotional dispositions is given. This account provides an expressivist explanation of three important features of moral demands: inescapability, authority independence and meriting. In the second part of the article, some ideas initially put forward by Christopher Boehm are developed and modified in order to provide a hypothesis about the evolution of the ability to token moral judgments. This hypothesis makes evolutionar…Read more
  •  37
    Evolution and psychology in philosophical perspective
    In Robin Dunbar & Louise Barrett (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology, Oxford University Press. 2009.
  •  96
    The role of emotions in ecological and practical rationality
    In D. Evans & Pierre Cruse (eds.), Emotion, Evolution, and Rationality, Oxford University Press. pp. 159--178. 2004.
  •  555
    On Dennett and the natural sciences of free will
    Biology and Philosophy 18 (5): 731-742. 2003.
    _Freedom Evolves _is an ambitious book. The aim is to show that free will is compatible with what physics, biology and the neurosciences tell us about the way we function and that, moreover, these sciences can help us clarify and vindicate the most important aspects of the common-sense conception of free will, those aspects that play a fundamental role in the way we live our lives and in the way we organize our society
  •  35
    Learning, evolution, and the icing on the cake
    Biology and Philosophy 17 (1): 141-153. 2002.
  •  44
    Kim Sterelny, the evolution of agency and other essays
    with Jacobsen Fellow
    Erkenntnis 58 (1): 132-135. 2003.