Marquette University
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1995
CV
Conway, Arkansas, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
17th/18th Century Philosophy
  •  78
    Malebranche and Knowledge of the Soul
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 73 (4): 571-581. 1999.
  •  181
    Epistemic vagueness?
    Think 8 (22): 47-50. 2009.
    The barn/barn façade thought experiment is familiar to most epistemologists. It is intended to present a counterexample to certain causal theories of knowledge; in it, a father driving through the countryside with his son says, ‘That's a barn’ while pointing to a barn. Unbeknownst to the father, however, a film crew is working in the area, and it has constructed several barn façades. While the father did correctly point to a barn when he made his assertion, he could have just as easily pointed t…Read more
  •  140
    If a statue and lump of clay have the same life-histories, are they numerically identical?
  •  112
    James Beattie, Practical Ethics, and the Human Nature Question
    Journal of Scottish Philosophy 10 (1): 1-12. 2012.
    This article begins by examining James Beattie's conception of speculative ethics, which he regards as the study of the foundation and nature of virtue. This leads to a discussion of the moral sense, or conscience, which Beattie claims is part of the nature of every rational being and which is designed to lead us to a virtuous life. Given this, I ask why Beattie thought himself warranted, or even needed, to dispense practical ethical advice. Answering this involves looking at Beattie's views on …Read more
  •  203
    Automata, living and non-living: Descartes' mechanical biology and his criteria for life (review)
    Biology and Philosophy 13 (2): 179-186. 1998.
    Despite holding to the essential distinction between mind and body, Descartes did not adopt a life-body dualism. Though humans are the only creatures which can reason, as they are the only creatures whose body is in an intimate union with a soul, they are not the only finite beings who are alive. In the present note, I attempt to determine Descartes'' criteria for something to be ''living.'' Though certain passages associate such a principle with the presence of a properly functioning heart, I s…Read more
  •  341
    François lamy, occasionalism, and the mind-body problem
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 46 (4). 2008.
    There is a long-standing view that Malebranche and his fellow occasionalists accepted occasionalism to solve the problem of interaction between immaterial souls and extended bodies. Recently, however, scholars have shown this story to be a myth. Malebranche, Geulincx, La Forge, and Cordemoy adopted occasionalism for a variety of reasons, but none did so because of a need to provide a solution to a perceived mind-body problem. Yet there is one Cartesian for whom the “traditional” reading is large…Read more
  •  97
    Knowing our nature: A note on Régis’ response to Malebranche
    History of European Ideas 33 (2): 135-141. 2007.
    Nicolas Malebranche was the first Cartesian philosopher to challenge Descartes’ claim that we are capable of possessing a clear and distinct understanding of the soul's nature. Other Cartesians, including Clauberg, La Forge, and Cordemoy, accepted without question the conclusion of the Second Meditation that the nature of the soul is better known than is the nature of body. After presenting an overview of Malebranche's argument, this note turns to the Cartesian philosopher Pierre-Sylvain Régis. …Read more
  •  138
    Causality and Human Freedom in Malebranche
    Philosophy and Theology 9 (3-4): 321-331. 1996.
    In that it holds God to be the only true efficient cause, Malebranche’s occasionalism would seem to deny human freedom and to make God responsible for our sins. I argue that Malebranche’s occasionalism must be considered within its Cartesian framework; once one understands what it is to be an occasional cause in this context, Malebranche can be seen as saving a place for human freedom, and he can consistently hold that we are morally responsible for our actions.