•  1
    This chapter extends the theme of poetic vision, its articulation, and its importance, beginning with this foundational thought: both Heidegger and Aristotle show us that the fundamental task of moral philosophy is not to construct arguments for particular views, and it is not to offer up rules for correctly carrying out actions. The work of these two philosophers, rather, shows us that morality requires a distinctive kind of seeing, and that this mode of perception cannot be reduced to its prop…Read more
  •  48
    Modest Immortality and Remembering the Dead
    Philosophy in the Contemporary World 31 (1): 53-67. 2025.
  •  27
    Introduction to the Symposium
    Philosophy in the Contemporary World 31 (1): 5-7. 2025.
  •  31
    Cannibalism
    In David M. Kaplan (ed.), Encyclopedia of Food and Agricultural Ethics, Springer Verlag. pp. 355-361. 2019.
  •  49
    Don’t Panic! Some Helpful Notes on the Present Apocalypse and Our Imminent Extinction
    Philosophy in the Contemporary World 30 (1): 133-149. 2024.
    In this paper, I take up the future extinction of humanity--a future the beginnings of which we have already set in motion. I examine our future extinction through the lens of the work of Günther Anders, former spouse to Hannah Arendt, cousin to Bertold Brecht, and one-time student of Heidegger. Anders argues that we have already lived through the apocalypse but have yet to realize it--we entered the apocalypse the moment we designed technology that could outperform us (and, indeed, extinguish u…Read more
  •  48
    Saturday Night Live's comedy and philosophy have something fundamental in common: both re‐tune attention by challenging assumptions about the world and each other. Comedy reveals assumptions by exploiting them in exaggerated form – and boy do we have a lot of assumptions, particularly about race and racial identity. “Black Jeopardy” reminds people that many things affect identities, not just the putative race to which we belong. The “neighborhood” we're exposed to is one of pure fancy: a comedic…Read more
  •  47
    Political Pessimism and the Seductions of Tyranny
    Philosophy in the Contemporary World 28 (2): 34-41. 2022.
    These remarks consider Andrew Fiala’s Tyranny from Trump to Plato in the context of political apathy and climate pessimism. First, I raise the issue of whether or not some form of tyranny might be necessary in dealing with the crisis of climate change. Second, I express some skepticism about Fiala’s dual remedies of moral education (Ch 8) and constitutional wisdom (Ch 9) to face our present political challenges.
  •  38
  •  82
    Affordances, Embodiment, and Moral Perception: A Sketch of a Moral Theory
    Philosophy in the Contemporary World 25 (1): 35-48. 2019.
    My aim in this article is programmatic. I argue that understanding perceptual experience on the model of perceptual affordances allows us to acknowledge the centrality of embodiment to moral phenomenology, on the one hand, and to see more transparently the place of the emotions in the moral life, on the other. I suggest some means by which moral perception, construed as the perception of moral affordances, might be cultivated.
  •  89
    Ergon and Logistikon in Republic
    Polis 25 (2): 261-267. 2008.
    This paper explores the tension between two views attributed to Plato: 1) that every person in a just society must fulfil his function, and 2) justice requires philosophical wisdom. It is argued that is not Plato’s view in Republic, and that this can be seen as early as Book II.
  •  197
    It’s About Time
    International Journal of Applied Philosophy 22 (1): 103-116. 2008.
    The most common argument in favor of torture in the current literature is the ticking bomb argument. It asks us to imagine a case where only torture can prevent the detonation of a bomb that will kill millions. In this paper, I argue that the seeming effectiveness of this argument rests on two things: 1) the underdetermined semantic content of the term ‘torture,’ and 2) a philosophical attitude that regards the empirical facts about torture as irrelevant. Once we pay attention to the facts about…Read more
  •  107
    Book Review: Ethics for Enemies: Terror, Torture, and War, written by F.M. Kamm (review)
    Journal of Moral Philosophy 11 (5): 657-660. 2014.
  • Agency, Normativity, and Theory: Awakening From an Anthropological Slumber
    Dissertation, University of California, Riverside. 2002.
    My aim in the dissertation is to provide an argument for re-conceiving the way we understand theories of human agency, broadly construed. Traditional approaches to theories of agency have emphasized epistemological concerns when we attempt to spell out what constitutes human existence. My primary concern is to show that this traditional methodological premise concerning human agency is at best misleading, and at worst false. The traditional emphasis on the accuracy of a given theory of human age…Read more
  •  47
  •  193
    Unwarranted Torture Warrants: A Critique of the Dershowitz Proposal
    Journal of Social Philosophy 39 (2): 308-321. 2008.
    No Abstract
  •  59
    Through humorous and revealing essays by professional philosophers, The Office and Philosophy illustrates broad philosophical concepts by exploring the characters and scenes of their unexamined lives in both the British and American versions of the acclaimed television series, The Office
  •  64
    Andrew Haas, The Irony of Heidegger Reviewed by
    Philosophy in Review 30 (2): 87-89. 2010.
  •  275
    What we owe the dead
    Journal of Applied Philosophy 26 (1): 54-70. 2009.
    abstract My aim in this paper is to argue that we have at least some obligations to the dead. After briefly considering some previous (unsuccessful) attempts to establish such obligations, I offer a reductio argument which establishes at least some obligations to the dead. Following this, the surprising extent of these obligations (given a few roughly Kantian assumptions) is considered. I then argue that there are and must be some significant limitations on the duties of the living in relation t…Read more
  •  26
    Philosophie in Twilight (edited book)
    with William Irwin, Rebecca Housel, and Marlies Ferber
    Wiley-Vch. 2010.
    Hier erfahren Sie, wieso Stephenie Meyers Liebesgeschichte so viele Menschen fasziniert und warum es sich dabei um so viel mehr als oberflächliche Jugendliteratur handelt: - Wieso fühlen sich Menschen von Vampiren magisch angezogen? - Sollte Edward seine Fähigkeit zum Gedankenlesen einsetzen? - Ist Edward ein romantischer Held oder einfach nur ein Stalker? - Was sagt der Kampf der "vegetarischen" Cullen-Familien gegen ihren Durst nach menschlichem Blut über den freien Willen aus? - Wird das ewig…Read more
  •  45
    The Case for Anti-Antirealism: Wittgenstein, Heidegger, and Aristotle on Language and Essence
    Philosophical Frontiers: A Journal of Emerging Thought 3 (2). 2008.
  •  2
    In this paper, I offer a critical reconstruction of John Searle's argument for what he calls `External Realism.' I argue that Searle's thesis is in fact ambiguous, and hence that it cannot establish the existence of brute entities . I further argue that, once properly understood, constitutive rules can be shown to be prior to, rather than dependent on, what Searle calls `brute facts' -- and hence that Searle's analysis reverses the order of priority between rules and brute facts
  •  241
    Murder, Cannibalism, and Indirect Suicide
    Philosophy in the Contemporary World 14 (1): 11-21. 2007.
    Reeently, a man in Germany was put on trial for killing and consuming another German man. Disgust at this incident was exacerbated when the accused explained that he had placed an advertisement on the internet for someone to be slaughtered and eaten-and that his ‘vietim’ had answered this advertisement. In this paper, I will argue that this disturbing ease should not be seen as morally problematic. I will defend this view by arguing that (1) the so-called ‘vietim’ of this cannibalization is not …Read more
  •  77
    Failures of Sight: An Argument for Moral Perception
    with Henry Jacoby
    American Philosophical Quarterly 44 (3). 2007.
    None
  •  23
    This book argues that the traditional emphasis on the accuracy of a given theory of human agency has systematically obscured the normative dimension in these theories and that recognizing this normative dimension allows us to see that a ...
  •  52
    Method, Ontology, and Re-claiming the 'Real': A reply to Jones
    Philosophy in the Contemporary World 21 (1): 92-98. 2014.
    In the following reply to Joe Frank Jones, Ill's "Analysis, Phenomenology and the Travails of Ontology," I argue that skepticism about method plays an important critical role in philosophical thinking. I further suggest that it may be time for philosophy to rehabilitate metaphysics rather than simply ceding it to the natural sciences.