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1166Understanding Institutions without Collective Acceptance?Philosophy of the Social Sciences 48 (6): 608-629. 2018.Francesco Guala has written an important book proposing a new account of social institutions and criticizing existing ones. We focus on Guala’s critique of collective acceptance theories of institutions, widely discussed in the literature of collective intentionality. Guala argues that at least some of the collective acceptance theories commit their proponents to antinaturalist methodology of social science. What is at stake here is what kind of philosophizing is relevant for the social sciences…Read more
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1845Game theory, cheap talk and post‐truth politics: David Lewis vs. John Searle on reasons for truth‐tellingJournal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 48 (3): 306-329. 2018.I offer two potential diagnoses of the behavioral norms governing post‐truth politics by comparing the view of language, communication, and truth‐telling put forward by David Lewis (extended by game theorists), and John Searle. My first goal is to specify the different ways in which Lewis, and game theorists more generally, in contrast to Searle (in the company of Paul Grice and Jurgen Habermas), go about explaining the normativity of truthfulness within a linguistic community. The main differen…Read more
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685Book ReviewsRichard Tuck,. Free Riding.Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2008. Pp. 223. $35.00 (review)Ethics 119 (1): 211-216. 2008.This review of Richard Tuck's Free Riding conveys Tuck's crucial distinction between the logic of collective action which fails due to the problem of causal negligibility, and free riding, which has been modeled as a Prisoner's Dilemma and involves casually impacting another actor in an adverse manner. Tuck also distinguishes the practice of voting which he argues neither fails due to the worry of causal negligibility or due to free riding; instead it represents a problem of achieving sufficienc…Read more
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1023The long-term viability of team reasoningJournal of Economic Methodology 22 (4): 462-478. 2015.Team reasoning gives a simple, coherent, and rational explanation for human cooperative behavior. This paper investigates the robustness of team reasoning as an explanation for cooperative behavior, by assessing its long-run viability. We consider an evolutionary game theoretic model in which the population consists of team reasoners and ‘conventional’ individual reasoners. We find that changes in the ludic environment can affect evolutionary outcomes, and that in many circumstances, team reason…Read more
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1323Normativity and Instrumentalism in David Lewis’ ConventionHistory of European Ideas 37 (3): 325-335. 2011.David Lewis presented Convention as an alternative to the conventionalism characteristic of early-twentieth-century analytic philosophy. Rudolf Carnap is well known for suggesting the arbitrariness of any particular linguistic convention for engaging in scientific inquiry. Analytic truths are self-consistent, and are not checked against empirical facts to ascertain their veracity. In keeping with the logical positivists before him, Lewis concludes that linguistic communication is conventional. H…Read more
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1987Arrow’s impossibility theorem and the national security stateStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 36 (4): 734-743. 2005.This paper critically engages Philip Mirowki's essay, "The scientific dimensions of social knowledge and their distant echoes in 20th-century American philosophy of science." It argues that although the cold war context of anti-democratic elitism best suited for making decisions about engaging in nuclear war may seem to be politically and ideologically motivated, in fact we need to carefully consider the arguments underlying the new rational choice based political philosophies of the post-WWII e…Read more
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1447Nietzsche’s Thirst For India: Schopenhauerian, Brahmanist, and Buddhist Accents In Reflections on Truth, the Ascetic Ideal, and the Eternal ReturnIdealistic Studies 34 (3): 239-262. 2004.This essay represents a novel contribution to Nietzschean studies by combining an assessment of Friedrich Nietzsche’s challenging uses of “truth” and the “eternal return” with his insights drawn from Indian philosophies. Specifically, drawing on Martin Heidegger’s Nietzsche, I argue that Nietzsche’s critique of a static philosophy of being underpinning conceptual truth is best understood in line with the Theravada Buddhist critique of “self ” and “ego” as transitory. In conclusion, I find that N…Read more
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790Rationality and freedom, by Amartya Sen. Harvard university press 2003Economics and Philosophy 20 (2): 381-389. 2004.
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Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyResearcher
Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Science, Logic, and Mathematics |
| History of Western Philosophy |
| Philosophy, Misc |
| Other Academic Areas |