•  147
    The Problem of Particularity in Kant’s Aesthetic Theory
    In Kevin A. Stoehr (ed.), The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy, Philosophy Documentation Center. pp. 197-208. 1999.
    An early version of "Kant on the Normativity of Taste" above. Original abstract: In moving away from the objective, property-based theories of earlier periods to a subject-based aesthetic, Kant did not intend to give up the idea that judgments of beauty are universalizable. Accordingly, the “Deduction of Judgments of Taste” aims to show how reflective aesthetic judgments can be “imputed” a priori to all human subjects. The Deduction is not successful: Kant manages only to justify the imputation …Read more
  •  1608
    'As Kant Has Shown:' Analytic Theology and the Critical Philosophy
    In Oliver D. Crisp & Michael C. Rea (eds.) https://philpapers.org/rec/CRIATN, Oxford University Press. pp. 116--135. 2009.
    On why Kant may not have shown what modern theologians often take him to have shown.