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    The desires of others
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 91 (3): 385-400. 2010.
    An influential view, defended by Thomas Scanlon and others, holds that desires are almost never reasons. I seek to resist this view and show that someone who desires something does thereby have a reason to satisfy her desire. To show this, I argue, first, that the desires of some others are reasons for us and, second, that our own desires are no less reason-giving than those of others. In concluding, I emphasize that accepting my view does not commit one to a desire-based account of reasons. Des…Read more
  • Wittgenstein on time
    Synthesis Philosophica 16 (1): 97-102. 2001.