•  386
    Content by courtesy
    Journal of Philosophy 84 (4): 197-213. 1987.
  •  96
    Selfless Persons: Goodness in an Impersonal World?
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 76 143-159. 2015.
    Mark Johnston takes reality to be wholly objective or impersonal, and aims to show that the inevitability of death does not obliterate goodness in such a naturalistic world. Crucial to his argument is the claim that there are no persisting selves. After critically discussing Johnston's arguments, I set out a view of persons that shares Johnston's view that there are no selves, but disagrees about the prospects of goodness in a wholly impersonal world. On my view, a wholly objective world is onto…Read more
  •  257
    Reply to Oppy's fool
    with G. B. Matthews
    Analysis 71 (2): 303-303. 2011.
    Anselm: I agreed that Pegasus is a flying horse according to the stories people tell, the paintings painters paint and so on . That is, Pegasus is a flying horse in the understanding of storytellers, their readers and the artists who depict Pegasus. You asked whether flying is not an unmediated causal power . Well, it could be an unmediated causal power if you or I had it, but not if a being with only mediated powers had it. And so poor Pegasus, a being whose powers are only those given him by s…Read more
  •  94
    Judgment and Justification
    Philosophical Review 100 (3): 481. 1991.
  •  212
    Why computers can't act
    American Philosophical Quarterly 18 (2): 157-163. 1981.
    To be an agent, one must be able to formulate intentions. To be able to formulate intentions, one must have a first-person perspective. Computers lack a first-person perspective. So, computers are not agents.
  •  98
    Science and the Attitudes: A Reply to Sanford
    Behavior and Philosophy 24 (2): 187-189. 1996.
    Explaining Attitudes was not intended to be hostile to science. Its target is what I called the Standard View, a conception of the attitudes that is held almost universally. The heart of the Standard View is the thesis that beliefs (and other..
  •  398
    First-personal aspects of agency
    Metaphilosophy 42 (1-2): 1-16. 2011.
    On standard accounts, actions are caused by reasons (Davidson), and reasons are taken to be neural phenomena. Since neural phenomena are wholly understandable from a third-person perspective, standard views have no room for any ineliminable first-personal elements in an account of the causation of action. This article aims to show that first-person perspectives play essential roles in both human and nonhuman agency. Nonhuman agents have rudimentary first-person perspectives, whereas human agents…Read more
  •  74
    Recent work in the philosophy of mind
    Philosophical Books 30 (January): 1-9. 1989.
  •  181
    Pereboom's Robust Nonreductive Physicalism
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 86 (3): 736-744. 2013.
  •  111
    Here’s what I intend to do. First, I want to summarize the paper as I see it. Then, as a philosopher is expected to do, I’ll present some questions and disagreements—both substantive and methodological—with Open Theism. Finally, despite the fact that I am an outsider, I want to comment on the debate over Open Theism within certain evangelical circles.
  •  94
    On being one's own person
    In Maureen Sie, Marc Slors & Bert van den Brink (eds.), Reasons of one's own, Ashgate. 2004.
  •  127
    “Form follows function,” the slogan of modernist architecture, could well be a slogan of artefacts generally. Since the choice of material for a tool is guided by the function of the tool, we may be tempted to think that having a functional nature distinguishes artefacts from natural objects. But that would be a mistake. Certain natural objects—especially biological entities like mammalian hearts—have functional natures too.