•  872
    Can a Case for Naturalism be Naturalized?
    Aporía: Revista Internacional de Investigaciones Filosóficas 10 4-11. 2015.
  •  1497
    In their ‘Ethical and Technical Challenges in Compensating for Harm Due to Solar Radiation Management Geoengineering’ (2014), Toby Svoboda and Peter Irvine (S&I) argue that there are significant technical and ethical challenges that stand in the way of crafting a just solar radiation management (SRM) compensation system. My aim in this article is to contribute to the project of addressing these problems. I do so by focusing on one of S&I’s important ethical challenges, their claim that the pollu…Read more
  •  870
    Trope
    In Robert Audi (ed.), The Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy, 3rd ed, Cambridge University Press. 2015.
  •  2048
    Contemporary discourse is littered with nasty and derailed disagreements. In this paper we hope to help clean things up. We diagnose two patterns of thought that often plague and exacerbate controversy. We illustrate these patterns and show that each involves both a logical mistake and a failure of intellectual charity. We also draw upon recent work in social psychology to shed light on why we tend to fall into these patterns of thought. We conclude by suggesting how the intellectual virtues…Read more
  •  2658
    Two Ways to Particularize a Property
    Journal of the American Philosophical Association 1 (4): 635-652. 2015.
    Trope theory is an increasingly prominent contender in contemporary debates about the existence and nature of properties. But it suffers from ambiguity concerning the nature of a trope. Disambiguation reveals two fundamentally different concepts of a trope: modifier tropes and module tropes. These types of tropes are unequally suited for metaphysical work. Modifier tropes have advantages concerning powers, relations, and fundamental determinables, whereas module tropes have advantages conce…Read more
  •  2667
    Nominalist Constituent Ontologies: A Development and Critique
    Dissertation, University of Notre Dame. 2009.
    In this dissertation I consider the merits of certain nominalist accounts of phenomena related to the character of ordinary objects. What these accounts have in common is the fact that none of them is an error theory about standard cases of predication and none of them deploys God or uniquely theistic resources in its explanatory framework. The aim of the dissertation is to answer the following questions: • What is the best nominalist account on offer? • How might it be improved? • Does it …Read more