•  9
    Eight. Heidegger
    In Ernst Cassirer: The Last Philosopher of Culture, Princeton University Press. pp. 195-219. 2008.
  •  393
    What Can We Learn From Happiness Surveys?
    Journal of Practical Ethics 2 (2): 20-32. 2014.
    Defenders of happiness surveys often claim that individuals are infallible judges of their own happiness. I argue that this claim is untrue. Happiness, like other emotions, has three features that make it vulnerable to introspective error: it is dispositional, it is intentional, and it is publically manifest. Other defenders of the survey method claim, more modestly, that individuals are in general reliable judges of their own happiness. I argue that this is probably true, but that it limits wha…Read more
  •  11
    Seven. The Philosophy of Life
    In Ernst Cassirer: The Last Philosopher of Culture, Princeton University Press. pp. 160-194. 2008.
  •  65
    Happiness, Pleasure, and Belief
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 95 (3): 435-446. 2017.
    This paper argues that happiness and pleasure are distinct states of mind because they stand in a distinct logical relation to belief. Roughly, being happy about a state of affairs s implies that one believes that s satisfies the description ā€˜sā€™ and that it is in some way good, whereas taking pleasure in s does not. In particular, Fred Feldman's analysis of happiness in terms of attitudinal pleasure overlooks this distinction.