•  9
    A Metaphysical Basis for Love?
    In Ryan Patrick Hanley (ed.), Love: a history, Oxford University Press. pp. 179-203. 2024.
    This chapter investigates a Cartesian concept of love that is grounded in rationalist metaphysics, plays an important role in ethical life, and consists of a holistic attitude defined as joining oneself with another “in such a way that we imagine a whole of which we think ourselves to be only one part and the thing loved another” (IX:387). I argue that René Descartes articulates this notion of love but falls short because the unity constitutive of love is inconsistent with core features of his m…Read more
  •  7
    Maria Montessori
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. forthcoming.
  •  14
    Kant on the Causes of Human Actions: A Brief Sketch
    In Valerio Rohden, Ricardo R. Terra, Guido A. De Almeida & Margit Ruffing (eds.), Recht und Frieden in der Philosophie Kants, Walter De Gruyter. pp. 33-44. 2008.
  •  62
    Montessori, math, and materials: a case of extended cognition
    with Laura Desiree Di Paolo
    Synthese 205 (5): 1-30. 2025.
    In this article, we bring Maria Montessori’s pedagogy into conversation with contemporary developments in cognitive science and the philosophy of mind. In particular, we seek to show that Montessori’s “prepared environment” provides a context within which cognitive tasks are performed in the interfaces and interactions among brains, bodies, and concrete mathematical materials. For ease of illustration, we will focus on one particular Montessori material—the “Stamp Game,” used by children of appr…Read more
  •  2
    Another Look at Kant and Degrees of Responsibility
    Con-Textos Kantianos 8 348-369. 2018.
    In “Kant and Degrees of Responsibility,” Joe Saunders claims that “Degrees of responsibility are important for both our moral and legal practices” and argues that “transcendental idealism precludes Kant from vindicating these judgments [about degrees of responsibility]” ; thus, we have reasons to reject Kant’s transcendental idealism. In this paper, I show how Kant’s transcendental idealism can accommodate and provide a metaphysical account for degrees of responsibility. Whether this “vindicates…Read more
  •  1
    Towards a Transcendental Critique of Feeling
    Con-Textos Kantianos 3 381-390. 2016.
    This paper focuses on responding to Jeanine Grenberg’s claim that my discussion of Kant’s feeling of respect leaves no meaningful room for investigating feeling first-personally. I first make clear that I do think that feelings can be investigated first-personally, both in that they can be prospective reasons for action and in that – at least in Kant’s Critique of the Power of Judgment – there are feelings that we should have. I then show that at the time of writing the “Incentives” chapter of t…Read more
  •  8
    This paper explores the relationship between empirical psychology, transcendental critique, and phenomenology in Kant’s discussion of respect for the moral law, particularly as that is found in the Critique of Practical Reason. I first offer an empirical-psychological reading of moral respect, in the context of which I distinguish transcendental and empirical perspectives on moral action and defend H. J. Paton’s claim that moral motivation can be seen from two points of view, where “from one poi…Read more
  •  1
    This volume collects Kant's most important ethical and anthropological writings from the 1760s, before he developed his critical philosophy. The materials presented here range from the Observations, one of Kant's most elegantly written and immediately popular texts, to the accompanying Remarks which Kant wrote in his personal copy of the Observations and which are translated here in their entirety for the first time. This edition also includes little-known essays as well as personal notes and fr…Read more
  •  69
    Character in Kant’s Moral Psychology: Responding to the Situationist Challenge
    Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 101 (4): 508-534. 2019.
    In recent years, several philosophers have used “situationist” findings in social psychology to criticize character-based ethical theories. After showing how these criticisms apply, prima facie, to Kant’s moral theory, I lay out a Kantian response to them. Kant admits the empirical reality of situation-dependence in human actions but articulates a conception of “ought implies can” that vindicates his character-based moral theory in the face of rarity of character. Moreover, he provides an interp…Read more
  • Affects and passions
    In Alix Cohen (ed.), Kant's Lectures on Anthropology: A Critical Guide, Cambridge University Press. 2014.
  •  63
    These remarks focus on Kraus’s claim that for Kant the category of substance cannot apply to the soul but that instead we can and should apply a merely regulative idea of the soul. While granting Kraus’s contention that we require an idea of the soul in order to investigate inner experience, I argue that the category of substance nonetheless applies to the soul, but that the notion of the soul as entirely non-corporeal is a regulative idea. To explore this contention, I closely examine two cruci…Read more
  •  98
    Review of Environmental Virtue Ethics
    Environmental Values 15 (2): 258-261. 2006.
  •  142
    Discipline and the cultivation of autonomy in Immanuel Kant and Maria Montessori
    Journal of Philosophy of Education 55 (6): 1097-1111. 2021.
    Journal of Philosophy of Education, EarlyView.
  •  63
    In recent years, philosophers and psychologists have criticized character- or virtue-based normative theories on the basis that human behavior and cognition depend more on situation than on traits of character. This set of criticisms, which initially aimed at broadly Aristotelian virtue theories in ethics, has expanded to target a wide range of approaches in both ethics and, recently, epistemology. In this essay, I draw on the works of Maria Montessori to defend her conception of character and p…Read more
  •  114
    The Moral Philosophy of Maria Montessori
    Journal of the American Philosophical Association 7 (2): 133-154. 2021.
    This paper lays out the moral theory of philosopher and educator Maria Montessori (1870–1952). Based on a moral epistemology wherein moral concepts are grounded in a well-cultivated moral sense, Montessori develops a threefold account of moral life. She starts with an account of character as an ideal of individual self-perfection through concentrated attention on effortful work. She shows how respect for others grows from and supplements individual character, and she further develops a notion of…Read more
  •  133
    Kant on Evil, Self-Deception, and Moral Reform, by PapishLaura. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2018. Pp. xvii + 257.
  •  62
    Towards a research program in Kantian positive psychology
    Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 71 89-98. 2018.
  •  117
    Maria Montessori's metaphysics of life
    European Journal of Philosophy 26 (3): 991-1011. 2018.
    This paper elucidates the core principles of Maria Montessori's metaphysics. Her attention to embryological, evolutionary, and educational development led to her teleological metaphysics of life. Individual organisms are governed by internally driven, perfectionist, discontinuous teleology. And this individual teleology is integrated into a holistic, ecological context whereby individuals' striving towards perfection works for the increased ordered complexity of the systems of which they are par…Read more
  •  91
    Weltschmerz: Pessimism in German Philosophy, 1860–1900 by Frederick C. Beiser
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 56 (1): 180-181. 2018.
    Frederick Beiser continues to unfold the German philosophical tradition, refusing to let a static and narrowly construed canon of "big names" obscure important philosophical debates in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Germany. Weltschmerz focuses on the pessimism controversy, the debate over "the thesis that life is not worth living, that nothingness is better than being, or that it is worse to be than not be".The most important philosopher in the book is Arthur Schopenhauer. Chapters 1–4 are …Read more
  •  121
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    Maria Montessori's Epistemology
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 22 (4): 767-791. 2014.
    This paper lays out the epistemology of Maria Montessori . I start with what I call Montessori's ‘interested empiricism’, her empiricist emphasis on the foundational role of the senses combined with her insistence that all cognition is infused with ‘interest’. I then discuss the unconscious. Partly because of her emphasis on early childhood, Montessori puts great emphasis on unconscious cognitive processes and develops a conceptual vocabulary to make sense of the continuity between conscious and…Read more
  •  74
    How to Treat Persons, by Samuel Kerstein
    Mind 124 (496): 1312-1318. 2015.
  •  125
    Ideas and Mechanism: Essays on Early Modern Philosophy (review)
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 38 (1): 125-126. 2000.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Philosophy 38.1 (2000) 125-126 [Access article in PDF] Margaret Dauler Wilson. Ideas and Mechanism: Essays on Early Modern Philosophy. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1999. Pp. xx + 524. Cloth, $70.00. Ideas and Mechanism is a record of remarkable scholarship. It collects thirty-one essays by one of the most influential scholars in early modern philosophy. (Wilson herself did most of the editing, thou…Read more
  •  215
    Adam Smith and the possibility of sympathy with nature
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 87 (4). 2006.
    As J. Baird Callicott has argued, Adam Smith's moral theory is a philosophical ancestor of recent work in environmental ethics. However, Smith's "all important emotion of sympathy" (Callicott, 2001, p. 209) seems incapable of extension to entities that lack emotions with which one can sympathize. Drawing on the distinctive account of sympathy developed in Smith's Theory of Moral Sentiments, as well as his account of anthropomorphizing nature in "History of Astronomy and Physics," I show that sym…Read more
  •  120
    The Naked Self: Kierkegaard and Personal Identity by Patrick Stokes
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 54 (4): 685-686. 2016.
    The Naked Self is a great book. It is good Kierkegaard scholarship and an excellent model of bringing history of philosophy to bear on contemporary metaphysics. After a stage-setting introduction, the book has eight main chapters and a conclusion including questions and answers from an imagined interlocutor. Stokes takes the reader from how “Kierkegaard’s phenomenology of self-experience may… be a useful resource for neo-Lockean metaphysics” to a sustained defense that “Kierkegaard himself is pl…Read more
  •  61
    Angaben zur Person Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778) was born in the Calvinist city-state of Geneva on June 28, 1712. The epoch-making moment” in Rousseau’s life came in 1749, when he fell across the question of the Academy of Dijon which gave rise to my first writing” OC I, 1135). The question was “Whether the restoration of the Sciences and Arts has contributed to the purification of morals.” Rousseau’s answer to that question – a decisive No – was his Discourse on the Origin of the Arts and S…Read more