•  307
    Intuitions Might Not Be Sui Generis: Some Criticisms of George Bealer
    Florida Philosophical Review 19 (1): 49-66. 2020.
    George Bealer provides an account of intuitions as “intellectual seemings.” My purpose in this paper is to criticize the phenomenological considerations that Bealer offers in favor of his account. In the first part I review Bealer’s attempt to distinguish intuitions from beliefs, judgments, guesses, and hunches. I examine each of the three phenomenological differences – incorrigibility, implasticity, and scope – that Bealer adduces between intuitions and these other types of mental contents. I a…Read more
  •  301
    What Grounds Special Treatment Between Siblings?
    Etikk I Praksis - Nordic Journal of Applied Ethics 14 (1): 67-83. 2020.
    Siblings ought to treat one another specially – in other words, siblings qua siblings ought to treat one another in ways that they need not treat others. This paper offers a theory of why this is the case. The paper begins with some intuitive judgments about how siblings ought to treat one another and some other normative features of siblinghood. I then review three potential theories of why siblings ought to treat one another specially, adapted from the literature on filial piety: the gratitude…Read more
  •  1035
    What Grounds Special Treatment Between Siblings?
    Etikk I Praksis - Nordic Journal of Applied Ethics 14 (1): 67-83. 2020.
    Siblings ought to treat one another specially – in other words, siblings qua siblings ought to treat one another in ways that they need not treat others. This paper offers a theory of why this is the case. The paper begins with some intuitive judgments about how siblings ought to treat one another and some other normative features of siblinghood. I then review three potential theories of why siblings ought to treat one another specially, adapted from the literature on filial piety: the gratitude…Read more
  •  21
    Asymmetry and the Afterlife: A Christian Response to David Benatar
    The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 19 (3): 377-389. 2019.
    According to David Benatar’s asymmetry argument, the transition from nonexistence to existence is always a harm, and procreation always a pro tanto wrong. This argument fails to reach its anti-natalist conclusion if we maintain the view that there is no temporal relationship between our worldly lives and our afterlives. On this view, since anyone who will be freely procreated has an existence in the afterlife that is atemporal with respect to worldly time, procreators do not move those they proc…Read more
  •  522
    Parental Compromise
    Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 25 (2): 260-280. 2022.
    I examine how co-parents should handle differing commitments about how to raise their child. Via thought experiment and the examination of our practices and affective reactions, I argue for a thesis about the locus of parental authority: that parental authority is invested in full in each individual parent, meaning that that the command of one parent is sufficient to bind the child to act in obedience. If this full-authority thesis is true, then for co-parents to command different things would b…Read more
  •  1802
    Veganism and Children: Physical and Social Well-Being
    Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 32 (2): 269-291. 2019.
    I claim that there is pro tanto moral reason for parents to not raise their child on a vegan diet because a vegan diet bears a risk of harm to both the physical and the social well-being of children. After giving the empirical evidence from nutrition science and sociology that supports this claim, I turn to the question of how vegan parents should take this moral reason into account. Since many different moral frameworks have been used to argue for veganism, this is a complex question. I suggest…Read more
  •  117
    Review of "Recognition," Cillian McBride (review)
    Political Studies Review 13 (2): 252. 2015.
  •  124
    Review of "Cosmopolitan Peace," Cécile Fabre (review)
    Political Studies Review 15 (3): 430-431. 2017.
  •  136
    Conciliationism and Fictionalism
    Organon F: Medzinárodný Časopis Pre Analytickú Filozofiu 4 (25): 456-472. 2018.
    This paper offers fictionalism as a new approach to the problem of reasonable disagreement discussed in social epistemology. The conciliationist approach to reasonable disagreement is defined, and three problems with it are posed: that it is destructive of inquiry, self-defeating, and unacceptably revisionary. Hans Vaihinger’s account of fictions is explained, and it is shown that if the intellectual commitments that are the subject of reasonable disagreements are treated as fictions rather than…Read more