•  32
    Religious Diversity and Social Responsibility
    Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 4 (1): 135-155. 2001.
  •  960
    The Rule of St. Benedict and Modern Liberal Authority
    European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 2 (1). 2010.
    In this paper I examine the sixth century ’Rule of St. Benedict’, and argue that the authority structure of Benedictine communities as described in that document satisfies well-known principles of authority defended by Joseph Raz. This should lead us to doubt the common assumption that premodern models of authority violate the modern ideal of the autonomy of the self. I suggest that what distinguishes modern liberal authority from Benedictine authority is not the principles that justify it, but …Read more
  •  111
  •  57
    Reply to Professor Zagzebski
    New Scholasticism 58 (4): 460-463. 1984.
  •  70
    A Modern Defense of Religious Authority
    Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 19 (3): 15-28. 2016.
  •  1
    John Martin Fischer, ed., God, Foreknowledge, and Freedom (review)
    Philosophy in Review 10 309-311. 1990.
  •  1818
    The Search for the Source of Epistemic Good
    Metaphilosophy 34 (1-2): 12-28. 2003.
    Knowledge has almost always been treated as good, better than mere true belief, but it is remarkably difficult to explain what it is about knowledge that makes it better. I call this “the value problem.” I have previously argued that most forms of reliabilism cannot handle the value problem. In this article I argue that the value problem is more general than a problem for reliabilism, infecting a host of different theories, including some that are internalist. An additional problem is that not a…Read more
  •  197
    Intellectual autonomy
    Philosophical Issues 23 (1): 244-261. 2013.
  •  5
    ``Rejoinder to Hasker"
    Faith and Philosophy 10 (2): 256-260. 1993.
  •  3848
    Exemplarist virtue theory
    Metaphilosophy 41 (1-2): 41-57. 1996.
    Abstract: In this essay I outline a radical kind of virtue theory I call exemplarism, which is foundational in structure but which is grounded in exemplars of moral goodness, direct reference to which anchors all the moral concepts in the theory. I compare several different kinds of moral theory by the way they relate the concepts of the good, a right act, and a virtue. In the theory I propose, these concepts, along with the concepts of a duty and of a good life, are defined by reference to exem…Read more
  •  197
    Religious Luck
    Faith and Philosophy 11 (3): 397-413. 1994.
  •  27
    Virtue in Ethics and Epistemology
    Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 71 1-17. 1997.
  •  2581
    Epistemic Authority and Its Critics
    European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 6 (4): 169--187. 2014.
  •  23
    Przedwiedza a wolna wola
    Roczniki Filozoficzne 56 (2): 465-490. 2008.