University of Arizona
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2000
APA Central Division
Knoxville, Tennessee, United States of America
Areas of Interest
Games
Philosophy of Law
  •  396
    The Grasshopper’s Error: Or, On How Life is a Game
    Dialogue 54 (4): 727-746. 2015.
    I here defend the thesis that the best life is the life that one plays as a game—specifically, a ‘Suitsian’ game that meets the definition proposed in The Grasshopper by Bernard Suits. Even more specifically, it is a nested, open, role-playing game where the life’s quality as a game partly depends on there being no more people than players. To defend this thesis I refute two powerful challenges to it, one from Thomas Hurka (2006) and another from within The Grasshopper itself. In the process, I …Read more
  •  212
    Floating Provisos and Sinking Islands
    Journal of Applied Philosophy 29 (3): 333-343. 2012.
    Rising sea levels may sink entire countries. Individualistic solutions to this climate catastrophe, such as those proposed by Meisels and Risse, are inadequate on both Kantian and Lockean criteria. This article concurs with Cara Nine's recent argument that such ‘ecological refugee states’ are entitled to territorial remedies. But Nine's proposal, founded on Locke's ‘sufficiency’ proviso and Nozick's famous application of it to waterholes in the desert, is instructively incorrect. Careful conside…Read more
  •  188
    Attachment to Territory: Status or Achievement?
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 42 (2): 101-123. 2012.
    It is by now widely agreed that a theory of territorial rights must be able to explain attachment or particularity: what can link a particular group to a particular place with the kind of normative force necessary to forbid encroachment or colonization?1 Attachment is one of the pillars on which any successful theory of territory will have to stand. But the notion of attachment is not yet well understood, and such agreement as does exist relies on unexamined assumptions. One such assumption is t…Read more
  •  87
    Democracy in a Global World (review)
    Social Theory and Practice 35 (1): 141-147. 2009.
    Review of Democracy in a Global World, ed. by Deen K. Chatterjee
  •  208
    Toward a pluralist account of parenthood
    with Tim Bayne
    Bioethics 17 (3). 2003.
    What is it that makes someone a parent? Many writers – call them ‘monists’– claim that parenthood is grounded solely in one essential feature that is both necessary and sufficient for someone's being a parent. We reject not only monism but also ‘necessity’ views, in which some specific feature is necessary but not also sufficient for parenthood. Our argument supports what we call ‘pluralism’, the view that any one of several kinds of relationship is sufficient for parenthood. We begin by challen…Read more
  •  107
    The Lockean efficiency argument and aboriginal land rights
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 78 (3). 2000.
    This article challenges Lockean theories according to which the dispossession of Indigenous peoples was not intrinsically unjust. Specifically, the "agricultural argument," and more recently "efficiency" arguments, posit that Indigenous peoples lack(ed) rights to their lands because they did not or do not use those lands in particular ways. The current article shows that these approaches fail. One reason they fail is that they undermine anything that could be considered a _claim_ to land, replac…Read more
  •  143
    Justice and the politics of deference
    Journal of Political Philosophy 13 (2). 2005.
    Steady progress toward justice is not evident within extant political systems. A good-faith commitment to justice therefore requires oppositional collective action. This paper articulates and defends a moral principle of “progressive solidarity” that guides oppositional political action. Solidarity requires us to work alongside others according to their choice of action, even if this requires doing what we believe unwise or immoral. Progressive solidarity requires deference to the decisions of t…Read more