•  37
    Virtues as Properly Motivated, Self-Integrated Traits
    with Blaine Fowers and Jean-Philippe Laurenceau
    Contemporary empirical research on virtues has been promising, but limited in depth and value by investigators’ reliance on global self-report questionnaires obtained at a single time-point. These questionnaires require respondents to summarize their trait features in very broad state-ments or focus narrowly on specific behaviors. Properly understood, virtues are partly constitut-ed by appropriate motivations in response to the real-world environment and integrated with the actor’s self—features…Read more
  •  156
    Ideal agency and the possibility of error
    Ethics 118 (2): 315-323. 2008.
    In “Practical Reason and the Possibility of Error," Douglas Lavin claims to have discovered a paradox deep in the heart of Christine Korsgaard’s neo-Kantian project. I argue that Lavin's criticism rests on a mistaken conception of ideal agency. In particular, he falsely assumes that since it is no accident that an ideal agent lives up to sound norms, it must have been impossible for her to deviate from them.
  •  1606
    Confucianism, Buddhism, and Virtue Ethics
    European Journal for the Philosophy of Religion 8 (1): 187-214. 2016.
    Are Confucian and Buddhist ethical views closer to Kantian, Consequentialist, or Virtue Ethical ones? And how can such comparisons shed light on the unique aspects of Confucian and Buddhist views? This essay (i) provides a historically grounded framework for distinguishing western views, (ii) identifies a series of questions that we can ask in order to clarify the philosophic accounts of ethical motivation embedded in the Buddhist and Confucian traditions, and (iii) then critiques Lee Ming-hue…Read more
  •  196
    Review: The Retrieval of Ethics by Talbot Brewer (review)
    Analysis 71 (1): 193-195. 2011.
    Short review of Talbot Brewer's excellent book "The Retrieval of Ethics"
  •  79
    Normativity and the Will by R. Jay Wallace (review)
    Ethics 117 (4): 790-794. 2007.
    Summary of Wallace's book. Raises an objection to Wallace's response to moral skepticism.