•  106
    Engaging undergraduate students and instigating debate within philosophy seminars is one of the greatest challenges faced by instructors on a daily basis. _How to Get Philosophy Students Talking: An Instructor’s Toolkit _is an innovative and original resource designed for use by academics looking to help students of all abilities get the most out of their time spent in group discussions. Each chapter features thought experiments, discussion questions and further readings on topics within the fol…Read more
  •  175
    Companions in guilt: Arguments for ethical objectivity – Hallvard Lillehammer
    Philosophical Quarterly 59 (235): 379-382. 2009.
    A review of "Companions in guilt: Arguments for ethical objectivity" by Hallvard Lillehammer
  •  85
    Review of Folke Tersman, Moral Disagreement (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2007 (2). 2007.
  •  256
    Good, God, and the open-question argument
    Religious Studies 41 (3): 335-341. 2005.
    In Finite and Infinite Goods, Robert Adams defends his metaphysical account that good is resemblance to God via an ‘open-question’ intuition. It is, however, unclear what this intuition amounts to. I give two possible readings: one based on the semantic framework Adams employs, and another based on Adams's account of humankind's epistemological limitations. I argue that neither of these readings achieves Adams's advertised aim.