•  34
    Introduction: Life’s meaning
    Human Affairs 29 (4): 359-362. 2019.
  •  114
    Does Rorty’s Pragmatism Undermine Itself?
    European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy 4 (1): 284-301. 2012.
    Paul Boghossian and Hilary Putnam have presented arguments designed to show self-referential difficulties within Rorty’s pragmatism. I respond to these arguments by drawing out the details of the pragmatic account of justification implicit within Rorty’s writings, thereby revealing it to be a sophisticated form of relativism that does not undermine itself. In Section I and II, I motivate my strategy of attributing a positive position to Rorty in order to respond to detailed, analytical arguments…Read more
  •  234
    Is Philosophy All About the Meaning of Life?
    Metaphilosophy 47 (2): 283-303. 2016.
    This article defends a conception of philosophy popular outside the discipline but unpopular within it: that philosophy is unified by a concern with the meaning of life. First, it argues against exceptionalist theses according to which philosophy is unique among academic disciplines in not being united by a distinctive subject matter. It then presents a positive account, showing that the issue of the meaning of life is uniquely able to reveal unity between the practical and theoretical concerns …Read more
  •  45
    Philosophy, Jazz, Hate and Love
    The Philosophers' Magazine 88 29-35. 2020.
  •  164
    Did Rorty’s Pragmatism Have Foundations?
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 18 (5): 607-627. 2010.
    There is an overt tension between Rorty’s pragmatist critique of philosophy and his apparent epistemological and metaphysical commitments, which it is instructive to examine in order to assess not only Rorty’s overall position, but also renewed contemporary interest in pragmatism and its metaphilosophical implications. After showing why Rorty’s attempts to limit the scope of his critique failed to resolve this tension, I try reading him as a constructive metaphysician who was attempting to balan…Read more
  •  103
    Horizons, PIOs, and Bad Faith
    Philosophy and Technology 25 (3): 345-361. 2012.
    I begin by comparing the question of what constitutes continuity of Personal Identity Online (PIO), to the traditional question of whether personal identity is constituted by psychological or physical continuity, bringing out the compelling but, I aim to show, ultimately misleading reasons for thinking only psychological continuity has application to PIO. After introducing and defending J.J. Valberg’s horizonal conception of consciousness, I show how it deepens our understanding of psychological…Read more
  •  128
    Conceptualizing physical consciousness
    Philosophical Psychology 26 (6): 817-838. 2013.
    Theories that combine physicalism with phenomenal concepts abandon the phenomenal irrealism characteristic of 1950s physicalism, thereby leaving physicalists trying to reconcile themselves to concepts appropriate only to dualism. Physicalists should instead abandon phenomenal concepts and try to develop our concepts of conscious states. Employing an account of concepts as structured mental representations, and motivating a model of conceptual development with semantic externalist considerations,…Read more
  •  30
    Jazz-Philosophy Fusion
    Performance Philosophy 2 (1): 99-114. 2016.
    In this paper I describe and provide a justification for the fusion of jazz music and philosophy which I have developed; the justification is provided from the perspectives of both jazz and philosophy. I discuss two of my compositions, based on philosophical ideas presented by Schopenhauer and Derek Parfit respectively; links to sound files are provided. The justification emerging from this discussion is that philosophy produces ‘non-argumentative effects’ which provide suitable material for art…Read more
  •  47
    The Sound of Philosophy
    Philosophy Now 119 26-29. 2017.
  •  106
    The history of mind
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 12 (4). 2004.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  93
    Philosophy between Religion and Science
    Essays in Philosophy 12 (2): 224-241. 2011.
    Philosophical concerns are evidenced from the beginning of human literature, which have no obvious connection to philosophy’s mainstream epistemological and metaphysical problematic. I reject the views that the nature of philosophy is a philosophical question, and that the discipline is united by methodology, arguing that it must be united by subject matter. The origins of the discipline provide reasons to doubt the existence of a unifying subject matter, however, and scepticism about philosophy…Read more
  •  99
    General philosophy
    with James Tartaglia and Richard Norman
    Philosophical Books 44 (2): 168-174. 2003.
  •  61
    General philosophy
    with J. P. Miller, J. Tartaglia, and C. Lindsay
    Philosophical Books 46 (1): 77-83. 2005.
  •  118
    Rorty’s Ambivalent Relationship with Kant
    Contemporary Pragmatism 13 (3): 298-318. 2016.
    I argue that Kant is a key figure in understanding Rorty’s work, by drawing attention to the fact that although he is ostensibly the principal villain of Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature, at the end of that book Kant provides the basis of Rorty's positive proposal that we view the world “bifocally”. I show how this idea was re-worked as “irony” in Continency, Irony, and Solidarity, and became central to Rorty’s outlook. However, by allowing this Kantian influence into his thinking, Rorty made…Read more
  •  1
    Transculturalism and the Meaning of Life
    Humanities 5 (2). 2016.
    I begin by introducing the standoff between the transculturalist aim of moving beyond cultural inheritances, and the worry that this project is itself a product of cultural inheritances. I argue that this is rooted in concerns about the meaning of life, and in particular, the prospect of nihilism. I then distinguish two diametrically opposed humanistic responses to nihilism, post-Nietzschean rejections of objective truth, and the moral objectivism favoured by some analytic philosophers, claiming…Read more
  •  3
    Philosophy in a Meaningless Life
    Bloomsbury Academic. 2016.
    This book combines an account of the autonomy of philosophy with a new theory of consciousness. The account of philosophy is rooted in the question of the meaning of life. This question, it is argued, is neither obscure nor obsolete, but rather reflects an ancient and natural concern to which all other traditional philosophical problems can be squarely related; allowing them to be reconnected with natural sources of interest, and providing a diagnosis of the typical lines of opposition to be fou…Read more