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131Locke and the Methodology of Newton’s PrincipiaArchiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 100 (3): 311-335. 2018.A number of commentators have recently suggested that there is a puzzle surrounding Locke’s acceptance of Newton’s Principia. On their view, Locke understood natural history as the primary methodology for natural philosophy and this commitment was at odds with an embrace of mathematical physics. This article considers various attempts to address this puzzle and finds them wanting. It then proposes a more synoptic view of Locke’s attitude towards natural philosophy. Features of Locke’s biography …Read more
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173Newton and God's SensoriumIntellectual History Review 24 (2): 185-201. 2014.In the Queries to the Latin version of the Opticks Newton claims that space is God’s sensorium. Although these passages are well-known, few commentators have offered interpretations of what Newton might have meant by these cryptic remarks. As is well known, Leibniz was quick to pounce on these passages as evidence that Newton held untenable or nonsensical views in metaphysics and theology. Subsequent commentators have largely agreed. This paper has two goals. The first is to offer a clear interp…Read more
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78Metaphysics in Richard Bentley's Boyle LecturesHistory of Philosophy Quarterly 34 (2): 155-74. 2017.This paper explores the metaphysical system developed in Richard Bentley’s 1692 Boyle Lectures. The lectures are notable for their attempt to argue that developments in natural philosophy, including Newton’s Principia, could bolster natural theology. The paper explores Bentley’s matter theory focusing on his commitment to a particular form of mechanism and his rejection of occult qualities. It then examines his views on the nature of divine omnipotence. Finally, it turns to his understanding of …Read more
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200Henry of Ghent’s Argument for Divine Illumination ReconsideredAmerican Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 89 (1): 47-68. 2015.In this paper I offer a new approach to Henry of Ghent's argument for divine illumination. Normally, Henry is criticized for adhering to a theory of divine illumination and failing to accept rediscovered Aristotelian approaches to cognition and epistemology. I argue that these critiques are mistaken. On my view, Henry was a proponent of Aristotelianism. But Henry discovered a tension between Aristotle's views on teleology and the nature of knowledge, on the one hand, and various components of th…Read more
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65Locke and Wilkins on Inner Sense and VolitionLocke Studies 14 239-259. 2014.The purpose of this paper is to elucidate two interesting parallels between views discussed in John Wilkins’ Of the Principles and Duties of Natural Religion and positions developed by John Locke in his Essay Concerning Human Understanding. The first parallel pertains to a faculty of inner sense. Both authors carve out a central role for this introspective perceptual modality. The second parallel pertains to volition and free will. Both authors employ an investigative methodology which privilege…Read more
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169Space Before God? A Problem in Newton's MetaphysicsPhilosophy 90 (1): 83-106. 2015.My goal in this paper is to elucidate a problematic feature of Newton's metaphysics of absolute space. Specifically, I argue that Newton's theory has the untenable consequence that God depends on space for His existence and is therefore not an independent entity. I argue for this conclusion in stages. First, I show that Newton believed that space was an entity and that God and space were ontologically distinct entities. Part of this involves arguing that Newton denies that space is a divine attr…Read more
Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |
PhilPapers Editorships
| Locke: Arguments for Theism |
| Locke: God's Attributes |
| Locke: Immortality |
| Locke: Philosophy of Religion, Misc |