•  302
    The objects of action explanation
    Ratio 25 (3): 326-344. 2012.
    This paper distinguishes between various different conceptions of behaviour and action before exploring an accompanying variety of distinct things that ‘action explanation’ may plausibly amount to viz. different objectives of action explanation. I argue that a large majority of philosophers are guilty of conflating many of these, consequently offering inadequate accounts of the relation between actions and our reasons for performing them. The paper ends with the suggestion that we would do well …Read more
  •  41
    Collective action
    The Philosophers' Magazine 72 101-102. 2016.
  •  119
    "Review of" Philosophy of History: A Guide for Students" (review)
    Essays in Philosophy 8 (2): 344-345. 2007.
  •  96
    An Honest Display of Fakery: Replicas and the Role of Museums
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 79 241-259. 2016.
    This essay brings together questions from aesthetic theory and museum management. In particular, I relate a contextualist account of the value of copies to a pluralistic understanding of the purpose of museums. I begin by offering a new defence of the no longer fashionable view that the aesthetic (as opposed to the ethical, personal, monetary, historical, or other) value of artworks may be detached from questions regarding their provenance. My argument is partly based on a distinction between th…Read more
  •  193
    One Fell Swoop
    Journal of the Philosophy of History 9 (3): 372-392. 2015.
    _ Source: _Volume 9, Issue 3, pp 372 - 392 In this essay I revisit some anti-causalist arguments relating to reason-giving explanations of action put forth by numerous philosophers writing in the late ‘50s and early ‘60s in what Donald Davidson dismissively described as a ‘neo-Wittgensteinian current of small red books’. While chiefly remembered for subscribing to what has come to be called the ‘logical connection’ argument, the positions defended across these volumes are in fact as diverse as t…Read more
  •  131
    Issue Introduction
    Essays in Philosophy 12 (1): 1-3. 2011.
  •  84
    He buttered the toast while baking a fresh loaf
    Philosophy and Public Issues - Filosofia E Questioni Pubbliche. forthcoming.
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  •  238
    Verbal Reports and ‘Real’ Reasons: Confabulation and Conflation
    Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 18 (2): 267-280. 2015.
    This paper examines the relation between the various forces which underlie human action and verbal reports about our reasons for acting as we did. I maintain that much of the psychological literature on confabulations rests on a dangerous conflation of the reasons for which people act with a variety of distinct motivational factors. In particular, I argue that subjects frequently give correct answers to questions about the considerations they acted upon while remaining largely unaware of why the…Read more