•  245
    Deciding Together
    Philosophers' Imprint 9. 2009.
    In this paper I develop a conception of joint practical deliberation as a special type of shared cooperative activity, through which co-deliberators jointly accept reasons as applying to them as a pair or group. I argue, moreover, that the aspiration to deliberative “pairhood” is distinguished by a special concern for mutuality that guides each deliberator’s readiness to accept a given consideration as a reason-for-us. It matters to each of us, as joint deliberators, that each party’s (individua…Read more
  •  256
    The Reunion of Marriage
    The Monist 91 (3-4): 558-577. 2008.
  •  121
    Book Review: A Defense of Abortion (review)
    Journal of Moral Philosophy 1 (3): 378-382. 2004.
  •  369
    Anger, Faith, and Forgiveness
    The Monist 92 (4): 507-536. 2009.
    Right after our tragedy, my idea of forgiveness was to be free of this thing, – the anger, the pain, the absorption. It was totally personal. It was a survival tactic to leave this experience behind. It had nothing to do with the offender. The second level was realizing how the word forgiveness applies to the relationship between the victim and the offender. How it means accepting and working on that relationship after a murder. The latter is more complicated. Now I think I see that forgiveness …Read more
  •  576
    Rethinking Relational Autonomy
    Hypatia 24 (4): 26-49. 2009.
    John Christman has argued that constitutively relational accounts of autonomy, as defended by some feminist theorists, are problematically perfectionist about the human good. I argue that autonomy is constitutively relational, but not in a way that implies perfectionism: autonomy depends on a dialogical disposition to hold oneself answerable to external, critical perspectives on one's action-guiding commitments. This type of relationality carries no substantive value commitments, yet it does ans…Read more