•  134
    Internalism and Hyperexternalism About Reasons
    The Journal of Ethics 16 (1): 15-34. 2012.
    Alan Goldman’s Reasons from Within is one of the most thorough recent defenses of what might be called ‘orthodox internalism’ about practical reasons. Goldman’s main target is an opposing view that includes a commitment to the following two theses: (O) that there are such things as objective values, and (E) that these values give rise to external reasons. One version of this view, which we can call ‘orthodox externalism’, also includes a commitment to the thesis (I) that rational people will be …Read more
  •  194
    Vague terms, indexicals, and vague indexicals
    Philosophical Studies 140 (3). 2008.
    Jason Stanley has criticized a contextualist solution to the sorites paradox that treats vagueness as a kind of indexicality. His objection rests on a feature of indexicals that seems plausible: that their reference remains fixed in verb phrase ellipsis. But the force of Stanley’s criticism depends on the undefended assumption that vague terms, if they are a special sort of indexical, must function in the same way that more paradigmatic indexicals do. This paper argues that there can be more tha…Read more
  •  200
    Expressivism and language learning
    Ethics 112 (2): 292-314. 2002.
  •  231
    Reply to Tenenbaum
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 37 (3): 463-476. 2007.
  •  211
    Color constancy and dispositionalism
    Philosophical Studies 162 (2): 183-200. 2013.
    This article attempts to do two things. The first is to make it plausible that any adequate dispositional view of color will have to associate colors with complex functions from a wide range of normal circumstances to a wide range of (simultaneously) incompatible color appearances, so that there will be no uniquely veridical appearance of any given color. The second is to show that once this move is made, dispositionalism is in a position to provide interesting answers to some of the most challe…Read more
  •  163
    Parity, Preference and Puzzlement
    Theoria 81 (3): 249-271. 2015.
    Ruth Chang has argued for the existence of a fourth positive value relation, distinct from betterness, worseness and equality, which she calls “parity.” In an earlier article I seemed to criticize Chang's suggestion by offering an interval model for the values of items that I claimed could accommodate all the phenomena characteristic of parity. Wlodek Rabinowicz, offering his own model of value relations, endorsed one central feature of my proposal: the need to distinguish permissible preference…Read more
  • Brute Rationality
    Philosophical Quarterly 56 (222): 145-146. 2006.