•  67
    Epistemology in Group Agency: Six objections in search of the truth (review)
    Episteme 9 (3): 255-269. 2012.
    List and Pettit's Group Agency is an extremely important book, spearheading a new wave of work on the metaphysics, epistemology and ethics of group agents. In this article, I focus on the epistemological thread in their discussion. After introducing the apparatus they use in analyzing the epistemic performance of groups, I criticize some elements and point to some ways in which the very same apparatus could be redirected to address them.Send article to KindleTo send this article to your Kindle, …Read more
  •  74
    Attitudes, Deontics and Semantic Neutrality
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 95 (4): 491-511. 2014.
    It has been recently suggested that a semantic theory for deontic modals should be neutral between a very large range of normative and evaluative theories. This article aims to clarify this talk of neutrality, in particular its scope and motivation. My thesis is that neutrality is best understood as an empirical thesis about a fragment of natural language that includes deontic modals – not as a new, sui generis methodological constraint on natural language semantics.
  • Deontic Logic and Normative Systems (edited book)
    with Davide Grossi, Joke Meheus, and Xavier Parent
    Springer. 2014.
  •  1730
    Deontic Modals and Probability: One Theory to Rule Them All?
    In Nate Charlow & Matthew Chrisman (eds.), Deontic Modality, Oxford University Press. forthcoming.
    This paper motivates and develops a novel semantic framework for deontic modals. The framework is designed to shed light on two things: the relationship between deontic modals and substantive theories of practical rationality and the interaction of deontic modals with conditionals, epistemic modals and probability operators. I argue that, in order to model inferential connections between deontic modals and probability operators, we need more structure than is provided by classical intensional th…Read more
  •  109
    Judgment Aggregation
    Philosophy Compass 6 (1): 22-32. 2011.
    Judgment aggregation studies how collective opinions arise from the aggregation of individual ones. This article surveys a variety of aggregation rules (possible ways of aggregating individual judgments into collective ones). Aggregation by majority opinion is known to satisfy some but not all the desiderata for an aggregation rule. More general impossibility results show that not all the natural desiderata can be satisfied by a single aggregation rule. To interpret these results, we focus here …Read more
  •  731
    Aggregating with reason
    Synthese 190 (15): 3123-3147. 2013.
    Judgment aggregation is naturally applied to the modeling of collective attitudes. In the individual case, we represent agents as having not just beliefs, but also as supporting them with reasons. Can the Judgment Aggregation help model a concept of collective reason? I argue that the resources of the standard judgment aggregation framework are insufficiently general. I develop a generalization of the framework that improves along this dimension. In the new framework, new aggregation rules becom…Read more