•  15
    Hi‐Fi Aesthetics
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 65 (2): 163-174. 2007.
    High‐fidelity aesthetics, as I shall call it, is an intuitively plausible position.1 It holds, in a nutshell, that a recording can capture what it records accur.
  •  151
    The Ordinary Conception of Race in the United States and Its Relation to Racial Attitudes: A New Approach
    with Julie Shulman and Enrique Covarrubias
    Journal of Cognition and Culture 9 (1-2): 15-38. 2009.
    Many hold that ordinary race-thinking in the USA is committed to the 'one-drop rule', that race is ordinarily represented in terms of essences, and that race is ordinarily represented as a biological (phenotype- and/or ancestry-based, non-social) kind. This study investigated the extent to which ordinary race-thinking subscribes to these commitments. It also investigated the relationship between different conceptions of race and racial attitudes. Participants included 449 USA adults who complete…Read more
  •  317
    On the methodology of the race debate: Conceptual analysis and racial discourse
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 76 (2). 2008.
    Analyzing racial concepts has become an important task in the philosophy of race. Aside from any inherent interest that might be found in the meanings of racial terms, these meanings also can spell the doom or deliverance of competing ontological and normative theories about race. One of the most pressing questions about race at present is the normative question of whether race should be eliminated from, or conserved in, public discourse and practice. This normative question is often answered in…Read more
  •  105
    Social constructionists about race frequently hold that race does not travel, that race is socially constructed, and that racial passing is possible. Ron Mallon has argued that these three principles cannot be consistently held at once. This article argues otherwise.
  •  97
    Constructivists holds that social facts are what make race. One prominent version of this view is historical: it claims that historical social facts make race. Famously, this view has been accused (by Appiah) of being circular or (as emphasized by Gooding-Williams) redundant. Recently historicalism has been defended against this view by Paul Taylor and Jorge Gracia. It is argued here that these defenses only work at the cost of making historicalism indeterminate.
  •  67
    Does Direct Moral Judgment Have a Phenomenal Essence?
    Journal of Moral Philosophy 10 (1): 52-69. 2013.
    Moral phenomenology has enjoyed a resurgence lately, and within the field, a trend has emerged: uniform rejection of the idea that the experience of making ‘direct’ moral judgments has any phenomenal essence, that is, any phenomenal property or properties that are always present and that distinguish these experiences from experiences of making non-direct- moral judgments. This article examines existing arguments for this anti-essentialism and finds them wanting. While acknowledging that phenomen…Read more