•  205
    Value and the regulation of the sentiments
    Philosophical Studies 163 (1): 3-13. 2013.
    “Sentiment” is a term of art, intended to refer to object-directed, irruptive states, that occur in relatively transient bouts involving positive or negative affect, and that typically involve a distinctive motivational profile. Not all the states normally called “emotions” are sentiments in the sense just characterized. And all the terms for sentiments are sometimes used in English to refer to longer lasting attitudes. But this discussion is concerned with boutish affective states, not standing…Read more
  •  109
    Envy
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2008.
  •  742
  •  515
    VIII. The significance of recalcitrant emotion
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 52 127-145. 2003.
    Sentimentalist theories in ethics treat evaluative judgments as somehow dependent on human emotional capacities. While the precise nature of this dependence varies, the general idea is that evaluative concepts are to be understood by way of more basic emotional reactions. Part of the task of distinguishing between the concepts that sentimentalism proposes to explicate, then, is to identify a suitably wide range of associated emotions. In this paper, we attempt to deal with an important obstacle …Read more
  •  249
    Empathy, Approval, and Disapproval in Moral Sentimentalism
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 49 (s1): 134-141. 2011.
    This discussion explores the moral psychology and metaethics of Michael Slote's Moral Sentimentalism. I argue that his account of empathy has an important lacuna, because the sense in which an empathizer feels the same feeling that his target feels requires explanation, and the most promising candidates are unavailable to Slote. I then argue that the (highly original) theory of moral approval and disapproval that Slote develops in his book is implausible, both phenomenologically and for the role…Read more
  •  210
  •  26
  •  142
    When evolutionary game theory explains morality, what does it explain?
    Journal of Consciousness Studies 7 (1-2): 296-299. 2000.
    Evolutionary attempts to explain morality tend to say very little about what morality is. If evolutionary game theory aspires not merely to solve the ‘problem of altruism', but to explain human morality or justice in particular, it requires an appropriate conception of that subject matter. This paper argues that one plausible conception of morality (a sanction-based conception) creates some important constraints on the kinds of evolutionary explanations that can shed light on morality. Game theo…Read more
  •  1
    Envy in the Philosophical Tradition
    In Richard H. Smith (ed.), Envy: Theory and Research, Oxford University Press. pp. 39-59. 2008.