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2745Placebo Effects and Informed ConsentAmerican Journal of Bioethics 15 (10): 3-12. 2015.The concepts of placebos and placebo effects refer to extremely diverse phenomena. I recommend dissolving the concepts of placebos and placebo effects into loosely related groups of specific mechanisms, including (potentially among others) expectation-fulfillment, classical conditioning, and attentional-somatic feedback loops. If this approach is on the right track, it has three main implications for the ethics of informed consent. First, because of the expectation-fulfillment mechanism, the pro…Read more
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123Liao, S. Matthew, Moral Brains: the Neuroscience of Morality: New York: Oxford University Press, 2016. Paperback € 22,13, pp. 384Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 20 (3): 671-674. 2017.Matthew Liao is to be commended for editing Moral Brains, a fine collection showcasing truly 12 excellent chapters by, among others, James Woodward, Molly Crocket, and Jana Schaich 13 Borg. In addition to Liao’s detailed, fair-minded, and comprehensive introduction, the book 14 has fourteen chapters. Of these, one is a reprint (Joshua Greene ch. 4), one a re-articulation of 15 previously published arguments (Walter Sinnott-Armstrong ch. 14), and one a literature review 16 (Oliveira-Souza, Zahn, …Read more
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1342How one becomes what one is: The case for a Nietzschean conception of character developmentIn Iskra Fileva (ed.), Questions of Character, Oxford University Press Usa. pp. 89-104. 2016.Gone are the heady days when Bernard Williams (1993) could get away with saying that “Nietzsche is not a source of philosophical theories” (p. 4). The last two decades have witnessed a flowering of research that aims to interpret, elucidate, and defend Nietzsche’s theories about science, the mind, and morality. This paper is one more blossom in that efflorescence. What I want to argue is that Nietzsche theorized three important and surprising moral psychological insights that have been born out …Read more
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1559A Schooling in Contempt: Emotions and the pathos of distanceIn Paul Katsafanas (ed.), Routledge Philosophical Minds: The Nietzschean Mind, Routledge. 2018.Nietzsche scholars have developed an interest in his use of “thick” moral psychological concepts such as virtues and emotions. This development coincides with a renewed interest among both philosophers and social scientists in virtues, the emotions, and moral psychology more generally. Contemporary work in empirical moral psychology posits contempt and disgust as both basic emotions and moral foundations of normative codes. While virtues can be individuated in various ways, one attractive princi…Read more
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71Christoph Luetge, Hannes Rusch, & Matthias Uhl, Experimental Ethics: Toward an Empirical Moral Philosophy: New York: Palgrave, 2014. ISBN 9781137409799, $100, HbkEthical Theory and Moral Practice 20 (1): 185-188. 2017.
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1959The Semantic Neighborhood of Intellectual HumilityProceedings of the European Conference on Social Intelligence. 2014.Intellectual humility is an interesting but underexplored disposition. The claim “I am (intellectually) humble” seems paradoxical in that someone who has the disposition in question would not typically volunteer it. There is an explanatory gap between the meaning of the sentence and the meaning the speaker expresses by uttering it. We therefore suggest analyzing intellectual humility semantically, using a psycholexical approach that focuses on both synonyms and antonyms of ‘intellectual humility…Read more
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171Wilde heuristics and Rum Tum Tuggers: preference indeterminacy and instabilitySynthese 189 (S1): 5-15. 2012.Models in decision theory and game theory assume that preferences are determinate: for any pair of possible outcomes, a and b, an agent either prefers a to b, prefers b to a, or is indifferent as between a and b. Preferences are also assumed to be stable: provided the agent is fully informed, trivial situational influences will not shift the order of her preferences. Research by behavioral economists suggests, however, that economic and hedonic preferences are to some degree indeterminate and uns…Read more
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1921Trust and distrust in institutions and governanceIn Judith Simon (ed.), Handbook of Trust and Philosophy, Routledge. forthcoming.First, we explain the conception of trustworthiness that we employ. We model trustworthiness as a relation among a trustor, a trustee, and a field of trust defined and delimited by its scope. In addition, both potential trustors and potential trustees are modeled as being more or less reliable in signaling either their willingness to trust or their willingness to prove trustworthy in various fields in relation to various other agents. Second, following Alfano (forthcoming) we argue that the soci…Read more
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141Response to Open Peer Commentaries on “Placebo Effects and Informed Consent”American Journal of Bioethics 15 (10): 1-3. 2015.The concepts of placebos and placebo effects refer to extremely diverse phenomena. I recommend dissolving the concepts of placebos and placebo effects into loosely related groups of specific mechanisms, including (potentially among others) expectation-fulfillment, classical conditioning, and attentional-somatic feedback loops. If this approach is on the right track, it has three main implications for the ethics of informed consent. First, because of the expectation-fulfillment mechanism, the pro…Read more
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1138Mapping Human Values: Enhancing Social Marketing through Obituary Data-MiningIn Eda Gurel-Atay & Lynn Kahle (eds.), Social and Cultural Values in a Global and Digital Age, Routledge. forthcoming.Obituaries are an especially rich resource for identifying people’s values. Because obituaries are succinct and explicitly intended to summarize their subjects’ lives, they may be expected to include only the features that the author(s) find most salient, not only for themselves as relatives or friends of the deceased, but also to signal to others in the community the socially-recognized aspects of the deceased’s character. We report three approaches to the scientific study of virtue and value t…Read more
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285Epistemic Situationism (edited book)Oxford University Press. 2017.Table of Contents Introduction: Epistemic Situationism by Abrol Fairweather 1. Is Every Epistemology A Virtue Epistemology? by Lauren Olin 2. Epistemic Situationism: An extended prolepsis by Mark Alfano 3. Virtue Epistemology in the Zombie Apocalypse: Hungry Judges, Heavy Clipboards and Grou Polarization by Berit Brogaard 4. Situationism and Responsibilist Virtue Epistemology by James Montmarquet 5. Virtue Theory Against Situationism by Ernest Sosa 6. Intellectual Virtue Now and Again by Chris L…Read more
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2242Experimental moral philosophyStanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1-32. 2018.Experimental moral philosophy emerged as a methodology in the last decade of the twentieth century, as a branch of the larger experimental philosophy (X-Phi) approach. Experimental moral philosophy is the empirical study of moral intuitions, judgments, and behaviors. Like other forms of experimental philosophy, it involves gathering data using experimental methods and using these data to substantiate, undermine, or revise philosophical theories. In this case, the theories in question concern the…Read more
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184BraggingThought: A Journal of Philosophy 3 (4): 263-272. 2014.The speech act of bragging has never been subjected to conceptual analysis until now. We argue that a speaker brags just in case she makes an utterance that is an assertion and is intended to impress the addressee with something about the speaker via the belief produced by the speaker's assertion. We conclude by discussing why it is especially difficult to cancel a brag by prefacing it with, ‘I'm not trying to impress you, but…’ and connect this discussion with Moore's paradox and the recent neo…Read more
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114What are the bearers of virtues?In Hagop Sarkissian & Jennifer Cole Wright (eds.), Advances in Experimental Moral Psychology, Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 73-90. 2014.It’s natural to assume that the bearers of virtues are individual agents, which would make virtues monadic dispositional properties. I argue instead that the most attractive theory of virtue treats a virtue as a triadic relation among the agent, the social milieu, and the asocial environment. A given person may or may not be disposed to behave in virtuous ways depending on how her social milieu speaks to and of her, what they expect of her, and how they monitor her. Likewise, asocial environment…Read more
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110Toni Rønnow-Rasmussen, Personal Value (review)Social Theory and Practice 39 (1): 166-170. 2013.In her critique of Moore’s (1903, p. 55) suggestion that one might answer the question “What is good?” with “Books are good,” Judith Jarvis Thomson (1997, p. 276) asks what it could mean to say that books are “just plain” good or bad. Aren’t they rather good to read, or in teaching philosophy, or for weighing down papers? This point is apropos in a review of Toni Rønnow-Rasmussen’s Personal Value in two ways. One might worry, first, about his facile dismissal (p. 7) of the notion that such first…Read more
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2672Ramsifying Virtue TheoryIn Current Controversies in Virtue Theory, Routledge. pp. 123-35. 2015.In his contribution, Mark Alfano lays out a new (to virtue theory) naturalistic way of determining what the virtues are, what it would take for them to be realized, and what it would take for them to be at least possible. This method is derived in large part from David Lewis’s development of Frank Ramsey’s method of implicit definition. The basic idea is to define a set of terms not individually but in tandem. This is accomplished by assembling all and only the common sense platitudes that invol…Read more
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90Michael W. Austin, ed. Virtues in Action: New Essays in Applied Virtue Ethics: New York: Palgrave, 2013. ISBN 978113728028, $95, HbkJournal of Value Inquiry 50 (2): 457-462. 2016.This ain’t your grandma’s virtue theory.In Michael Austin’s bold new collection, Virtues in Action: New Essays in Applied Virtue Ethics, gone are the pretentions of defining right action generically as what a virtuous person would do in the circumstances, while acting in and from character, provided that a virtuous person would end up in those circumstances. Instead, we find detailed explorations of specific virtues and vices related to specific fields of activity and problems, with attention (s…Read more
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1754I Know You Are, But What Am I?: Anti-Individualism in the Development of Intellectual Humility and Wu-WeiLogos and Episteme 7 (4): 435-459. 2016.Virtues are acquirable, so if intellectual humility is a virtue, it’s acquirable. But there is something deeply problematic—perhaps even paradoxical—about aiming to be intellectually humble. Drawing on Edward Slingerland’s analysis of the paradoxical virtue of wu-wei in Trying Not To Try (New York: Crown, 2014), we argue for an anti-individualistic conception of the trait, concluding that one’s intellectual humility depends upon the intellectual humility of others. Slingerland defines wu-wei as …Read more
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819Becoming less unreasonable: A reply to ShermanSocial Epistemology Review and Reply Collective 4 (7): 59-62. 2015.
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236Explaining Away Intuitions About Traits: Why Virtue Ethics Seems Plausible (Even if it Isn't)Review of Philosophy and Psychology 2 (1): 121-136. 2011.This article addresses the question whether we can know on the basis of folk intuitions that we have character traits. I answer in the negative, arguing that on any of the primary theories of knowledge, our intuitions about traits do not amount to knowledge. For instance, because we would attribute traits to one another regardless of whether we actually possessed such metaphysically robust dispositions, Nozickian sensitivity theory disqualifies our intuitions about traits from being knowledge. Y…Read more
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1156Reasons-based moral judgment and the erotetic theoryIn Jean-François Bonnefon & Bastien Trémolière (eds.), Moral Inferences, Routledge. 2017.We argue that moral decision making is reasons-based, focusing on the idea that people encounter decisions as questions to be answered and that they process reasons to the extent that they can see them as putative answers to those questions. After introducing our topic, we sketch the erotetic reasons-based framework for decision making. We then describe three experiments that extend this framework to moral decision making in different question frames, cast doubt on theories of moral decision mak…Read more
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219Reversing the side-effect effect: the power of salient normsPhilosophical Studies 172 (1): 177-206. 2015.In the last decade, experimental philosophers have documented systematic asymmetries in the attributions of mental attitudes to agents who produce different types of side effects. We argue that this effect is driven not simply by the violation of a norm, but by salient-norm violation. As evidence for this hypothesis, we present two new studies in which two conflicting norms are present, and one or both of them is raised to salience. Expanding one’s view to these additional cases presents, we arg…Read more
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1615The Embedded and Extended Character HypothesesIn Julian Kiverstein (ed.), The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of the Social Mind, Routledge. pp. 465-478. 2016.This paper brings together two erstwhile distinct strands of philosophical inquiry: the extended mind hypothesis and the situationist challenge to virtue theory. According to proponents of the extended mind hypothesis, the vehicles of at least some mental states (beliefs, desires, emotions) are not located solely within the confines of the nervous system (central or peripheral) or even the skin of the agent whose states they are. When external props, tools, and other systems are suitably integra…Read more
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114Simon May, Nietzsche’s On the Genealogy of Morality: A Critical Guide, 345 pages. ISBN: 9780521518802. Hardback: $99.00 (review)Journal of Moral Philosophy 10 (5): 692-694. 2013.
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319Moral Psychology: An IntroductionPolity. 2015.This book provides a rich, systematic, and accessible introduction to moral psychology, aimed at undergraduate philosophy and psychology majors. There are eight chapters, in addition to a short introduction, prospective conclusion, and extensive bibliography. The recipe for each chapter will be: a) to introduce a philosophical topic (e.g., altruism, virtue, preferences, rules) and some prominent positions on it, without assuming prior acquaintance on the part of the reader b) to canvass and expl…Read more
CUNY
Alumnus, 2011
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Areas of Specialization
| Epistemology |
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Normative Ethics |
| 19th Century Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| Social Epistemology |
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Philosophy of Language, Miscellaneous |
PhilPapers Editorships
| Skepticism about Character |