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98Philosophy of Religion: A Guide and Anthology; Philosophy of ReligionPhilosophia Christi 3 (1): 279-283. 2001.
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36Is Strategic Thinking Desirable in Philosophical Reflection?Philosophia Christi 17 (1): 213-221. 2015.We argue that, ideally, philosophy—as the love of wisdom—should not be practiced strategically. Among genuine lovers of wisdom, there should be no need for strategic skills; by “strategic” we refer to those skill used in the military and, by extension, in business and sports that involves deception, misrepresentation, the use of surprise to disorient opponents, and so on. We give regrettable examples of non-Christian and Christian philosophers using strategic skills. This paper is dedicated to t…Read more
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53Black Lives, Sex, and Revealed Religion Matter!Philosophia Christi 19 (1): 103-119. 2017.Kant’s negative, distorted views on black Africans, human sexuality, and revealed religion led him to undervalue the case for racial equality, healthy sexual intimacy, and the virtues of Christianity as a revealed religion with its commending worship, prayer, and rites. Kantian anthropology and critique of revealed religion is contrasted with the more capacious approach of the Cambridge Platonists. Challenging Kant’s methodological bias is important in removing the obstacles facing a fair assess…Read more
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150Testimony, Evidence, and Wisdom in Today’s Philosophy of ReligionTeaching Philosophy 34 (2): 105-118. 2011.In philosophy of religion, when, if ever, is it better to philosophically engage one another as advocates of competing religions (or secular naturalism) as opposed to conducting a more detached philosophical investigation of each other’s actual religious convictions? We offer a narrative overview of a philosophy of religion seminar we participated in, highlighting questions about the possibility of even understanding persons of different religions and considering when, if ever, one’s own religio…Read more
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110Abstract Objects and Causation: Bringing Causation Back Into Contemporary PlatonismRevista Portuguesa de Filosofia 71 (4): 769-780. 2015.Resumo O autor defenderá, por um lado, a existência dos objectos abstractos e, por outro, o seu papel causal, numa ontologia platónica, tal como enquadrada por Roderick Chisholm. Se plausível, a natureza e o papel dos abstracta sob a forma de estados de coisas, oferecem-nos razões para acreditar em uma descrição bem-sucedida e explicativa da intencionalidade humana e animal que não está encerrada no mundo físico. Palavras-chave : causalidade, encerramento causal, fisicalismo, objectos abstractos…Read more
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156When Should Philosophers Be Silent?Philosophy 87 (2): 163-187. 2012.Are there general precepts governing when philosophers should not conduct inquiry on a given topic? When, if ever, should a philosopher just be silent? In this paper we look at a number of practical, epistemic, and moral arguments for philosophical silence. Some are quite general, and suggest that it is best never to engage in philosophical inquiry, while others are more domain - or context - specific. We argue that these arguments fail to establish their conclusions. We do, however, try to iden…Read more
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61Review of Kevin J. harrelson, The Ontological Argument From Descartes to Hegel (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (7). 2009.
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``Unknowable Truths and Omniscience: A Reply to Kvanvig"Journal of the American Academy of Religion 61 553-566. 1993.
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1Jesus Christ and the meaning of lifeIn Paul K. Moser (ed.), Jesus and Philosophy: New Essays, Cambridge University Press. 2008.
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189The virtues of embodimentPhilosophy 76 (1): 111-125. 2001.Surprisingly, materialists and dualists often appeal to the same factors in their depiction of being an embodied, human person: sensations, agency, and causal underpinnings. I propose that this picture be expanded to include epistemic, structural, and affective components. I further propose that these elements, taken together, be construed as virtues. Being an embodied, human person consists in the exercise of six types of virtues: Sensory Virtues, the Virtue of Agency, Constitutional Virtues, E…Read more
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152Nagel’s Vista or Taking Suhjectivity SeriouslySouthern Journal of Philosophy 26 (3): 393-401. 1988.
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127The perils of subjectivityInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 40 (4): 475-480. 1997.
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65The Ideal Observer’s Philosophy of ReligionThe Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 4 51-58. 1999.Philosophical assessments of different religious traditions face two substantial objections, among others. According to one, the very nature of religious traditions as embedded forms of life prevents this philosophical undertaking. According to the other, a philosophical inventory is possible but under its guise no religious tradition will be left standing. I reply to both and then comment on whether there is (or can be) an ideal observation post from which to philosophically elucidate and compa…Read more
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102The Divine Attributes (review)Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 70 (3): 742-744. 2005.This book is a first-rate contribution to analytic philosophy of religion. The divine attributes that are the focus of this analytic enterprise are constitutive of theism. They include substantiality, incorporeality, necessary existence, eternality, omniscience, perfect virtue, moral admirability, and omnipotence. Hoffman and Rosenkrantz limit themselves to a conceptual goal; they argue for the coherence of theism not its truth. The book contains a useful glossary and terms are introduced with c…Read more
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7Cartesian DualismDissertation, Brown University. 1984."Cartesian Dualism" is a systematic examination of a version of mind-body dualism in light of recent work in the philosophy of mind and the theory of reference. I analyze Descartes' modal argument for dualism and argue that some of the principal objections against dualism are not decisive. The thesis is divided into five sections. ;The first section sets forth the main features of Descartes' ontology and his theory of mind. I defend Descartes' theory of individuation and discuss recent conceptio…Read more
Northfield, Minnesota, United States of America
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Philosophy of Religion |