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116“This Endless Space between the Words”: The Limits of Love in Spike Jonze'sHerMidwest Studies in Philosophy 39 (1): 120-143. 2015.
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74One. “Something In Between”: On the Nature of LoveIn Love’s Vision, Princeton University Press. pp. 1-27. 2011.
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55John Gibson, ed., The Philosophy of PoetryEstetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 53 (1): 100-110. 2016.A review of John Gibson´s The Philosophy of Poetry.
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78Friendship and Agent-Relative MoralityRoutledge. 2016.First Published in 2001. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
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169Meaningless Happiness and Meaningful SufferingSouthern Journal of Philosophy 42 (3): 333-347. 2004.
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191Beauty, Evil, and The English PatientPhilosophy and Literature 28 (1): 23-40. 2004.Can literature provide moral insight? Or can literary works do nothing more than reflect the moral views that readers bring to them? We argue that literary works can provide genuine moral insight by discussing one that does. Michael Ondaatje's The English Patient challenges two key assumptions about moral evil: that evil necessarily involves active malevolence, and that evil and aesthetic beauty are mutually exclusive. These assumptions play foundational roles both in everyday moral thinking, an…Read more
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28Two. Love’s Blindness : Love’s Closed HeartIn Love’s Vision, Princeton University Press. pp. 28-45. 2011.
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80“Like a Picture or a Bump on the Head”: Vision, Cognition, and the Language of PoetryMidwest Studies in Philosophy 33 (1): 131-158. 2009.No Abstract
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220Terrorism, War, and The Killing of the InnocentEthical Theory and Moral Practice 10 (4): 353-372. 2007.Commonsense moral thought holds that what makes terrorism particularly abhorrent is the fact that it tends to be directed toward innocent victims. Yet contemporary philosophers tend to doubt that the concept of innocence plays any significant role here, and to deny that prohibitions against targeting noncombatants can be justified through appeal to their moral innocence. I argue, however, that the arguments used to support these doubts are ultimately unsuccessful. Indeed, the philosophical posit…Read more
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25Afterword: Between the Universal and the ParticularIn Love’s Vision, Princeton University Press. pp. 169-172. 2011.
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169Goldstick on the 'Two Hats' ProblemUtilitas 15 (3): 369. 2003.The indirect-strategy consequentialist recommends that the consequentialist agent develop certain non-consequentialist feelings and dispositions. It is difficult to see, however, how such an agent could knowingly do this, given her moral beliefs. Goldstick has argued that the problem is not particular to consequentialism; deontologists, too, are obliged to admit the possibility of mental divisions of this sort. I argue, however, that the type of mental division to which the deontologist is commi…Read more
Chico, California, United States of America
Areas of Interest
| Aesthetics |
| Meta-Ethics |
| Normative Ethics |