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13Ancient Egyptian metaethics: maat as moral realismBritish Journal for the History of Philosophy 1-21. forthcoming.In this paper, I develop an interpretation of ancient Egyptian ethics that foregrounds its metaethical foundations. In particular, I argue that the fundamental ethical concept employed, that of maat (often translated as ‘truth', ‘justice', or ‘right order'), should be understood as expressing a form of robust moral realism. This view is in direct opposition to the only sustained treatment of the metaethics of maat in the secondary literature, DeLapp (“The Metaethics of Maat”), who argues that an…Read more
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65Scepticism About Neo-Aristotelian EssencesRevista Portuguesa de Filosofia 80 (4): 885-904. 2024.Many philosophers today accept the broadly Aristotelian view that one can explain de re necessary properties by invoking essence. These ‘Neo-Aristotelian essentialists’ hold that a property F is an essential property of x iff specifying F gives a correct answer to the Aristotelian ‘what is x?’ question. We are sceptical. According to neo-Aristotelian essentialists, essential properties are not themselves de re modal properties, but they are supposed to explain why things have their de re modal p…Read more
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10‘Or both’: A reply to Lajevardi on the alleged exclusivity of disjunction in EnglishAnalysis 83 (1): 29-30. 2023.
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7Super Courses: The Future of Teaching and Leafning, by Ken Bain (review)Teaching Philosophy 44 (3): 372-375. 2021.
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93‘Or both’: A reply to Lajevardi on the alleged exclusivity of disjunction in EnglishAnalysis 1 29-30. 2022.Exclusivists interpret the ‘or’ of English (and other natural languages) exclusively, but may wish to introduce an inclusive sense of disjunction. A common natu.
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141The divine hiddenness objection is not costly for atheistsAnalysis 81 (3): 402-404. 2021.Perry Hendricks has recently argued that endorsing the divine hiddenness objection to the existence of God ‘eliminates’ or ‘does away with’ all de jure objections to theism. So, he says, anyone who endorses the divine hiddenness objection must ‘reject’ any de jure objection. ‘And this,’ he says, ‘means that the argument from divine hiddenness is costly for atheists’. However, although Hendricks's argument is an interesting one, it does not establish any of these things, at least on any natural u…Read more
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On Moral StatusIn Simo Vehmas & Reetta Mietola (eds.), Narrowed Lives: Meaning, Moral Value, and Profound Intellectual Disability, . pp. 185-212. 2021.
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145Critical note on Williamson: A defence of the actualism‐possibilism debatePhilosophical Forum 52 (1): 91-96. 2021.In his book Modal Logic as Metaphysics, Williamson argues that the traditional actualist‐possibilist debate should be abandoned as hopelessly unclear and that we should get on with the clearer contingentism‐necessitism debate. We think that Williamson’s pessimism is not warranted by the brief arguments he gives. In this paper, we explain why and provide a clear formulation of the traditional actualist‐possibilist debate.
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133Relativism and the foundations of philosophy – Stephen HalesPhilosophical Quarterly 59 (234): 170-173. 2009.No Abstract.
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140Non‐Therapeutic Modification and Self‐Interest: Reply to SchrammeBioethics 22 (8): 455-456. 2008.ABSTRACT In this article I reply to Thomas Schramme's argument that there are no good reasons for the prohibition of severe forms of voluntary non‐therapeutic body modification. I argue that on paternalistic assumptions there is, in fact, a perfectly good reason.
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190A new look at Berkeley's idealismHeythrop Journal 50 (2): 189-194. 2009.In this note I firstly give a formulation of Berkeleyean Idealism in modern anti‐realist terms. Secondly, I supply a reading of Berkeley that serves to do three things: 1. It makes clear that the formulation of the position in modern terms is acceptable. 2. It offers a revealing insight into the reasons why Berkeley accepted the position. 3. It allows us to see that these reasons are, in fact, bad ones.
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203To be fairAnalysis 74 (1): 47-57. 2014.In this article I present a theory of what it is to be fair. I take my cue from Broome’s well known 1990 account of fairness. Broome’s basic thesis is that fairness is the proportional satisfaction of claims, and with this I am in at least partial agreement. But neither Broome nor anyone else (so far as I know) has laid down a theory of precisely what one must do in order to be fair. The theory offered here does just this.
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93The Repeatability Argument Poses No New Threat for Bundle Theorists: A Reply to BenocciAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 98 (4): 826-830. 2020.Matteo Benocci [AJP, 2018] has presented a new argument, the Repeatability Argument, against any version of the Bundle Theory that includes a commitment to the principle that concrete particulars constituted by exactly the same universals are identical. In this discussion note, I argue that the Repeatability Argument fails because defenders of the Bundle Theory can reject one of its key steps on principled grounds. I thus conclude that Benocci provides Bundle Theorists with no new threat.
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148Can Essence Provide Knowledge of Metaphysical Necessity? A Reply to JagoPhilosophia 48 (3): 931-933. 2020.In this paper I argue against Mark Jago’s recent suggestion that ordinary knowers can move from knowledge of essence to knowledge of metaphysical necessity.
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65Must Antiques Be Technically Excellent? A Rejoinder to Killin: DiscussionJournal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 77 (1): 83-85. 2019.In “What Is an Antique?” (2016), we argued that the concept of an antique is an adjectival concept: it does not pick out a kind of object, but rather appli.
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164Moral Development in Early Childhood Is Key for Moral EnhancementAmerican Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 3 (4): 25-26. 2012.
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1635Profound Intellectual Disability and the Bestowment View of Moral StatusCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 26 (3): 505-516. 2017.This article engages with debates concerning the moral worth of human beings with profound intellectual and multiple disabilities (PIMDs). Some argue that those with such disabilities are morally less valuable than so-called normal human beings, whereas others argue that all human beings have equal moral value and so each group of humans ought to be treated with equal concern. We will argue in favor of a reconciliatory view that takes points from opposing camps in the debates about the moral wor…Read more
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818When Do Persons Die?: Indeterminacy, Death, and Referential EligibilityJournal of Value Inquiry 52 (2): 153-167. 2018.The topic of this paper is the general thesis that the death of the human organism is what constitutes the death of a person. All admit that when the death of a human organism occurs, in some form or another, this normally does result in the death of a person. But, some maintain, organismic death is not the same thing as personal death. Why? Because, they maintain, despite the fact that persons are associated with a human organism (‘their organism’), they are not identical with their organism, a…Read more
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1The Simple and Complex Views of Personal Identity DistinguishedIn Valerio Buonomo (ed.), The Persistence of Persons: Studies in the Metaphysics of Personal Identity Over Time, Editiones Scholasticae. pp. 21-40. 2017.
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185On There Being Infinitely Many Thinkable Thoughts: A Reply to Porpora and a Defence of TegmarkPhilosophia 43 (1): 35-42. 2015.Porpora offers an a priori argument for the conclusion that there are infinitely many thoughts that it is physically possible for us to think. That there should be such an a priori argument is astonishing enough. That the argument should be simple enough to teach to a first-year undergraduate class in about 20 min, as Porpora’s is, is more astonishing still. Porpora’s main target is Max Tegmark’s recent argument for the claim that if current physics is right, then there are mental duplicates of …Read more
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466IdentityStanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2022.Much of the debate about identity in recent decades has been about personal identity, and specifically about personal identity over time, but identity generally, and the identity of things of other kinds, have also attracted attention. Various interrelated problems have been at the centre of discussion, but it is fair to say that recent work has focussed particularly on the following areas: the notion of a criterion of identity; the correct analysis of identity over time, and, in particular, the…Read more
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175What Is an Antique?Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 74 (1): 75-86. 2016.Antiques are undoubtedly objects worthy of aesthetic appreciation, but do they have a distinctive aesthetic value in virtue of being antiques? In this article we give an account of what it is to be an antique that gives the thesis that they do have a distinctive aesthetic value a chance of being true and suggests what that distinctive value consists in. After introducing our topic in Section I, in Section II we develop and defend the Adjectival Thesis: the thesis that the concept of being an ant…Read more
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149Castles Built on Clouds: Vague Identity and Vague ObjectsIn Ken Akiba & Ali Abasnezhad (eds.), Vague Objects and Vague Identity: New Essays on Ontic Vagueness, Springer. pp. 305-326. 2014.Can identity itself be vague? Can there be vague objects? Does a positive answer to either question entail a positive answer to the other? In this paper we answer these questions as follows: No, No, and Yes. First, we discuss Evans’s famous 1978 argument and argue that the main lesson that it imparts is that identity itself cannot be vague. We defend the argument from objections and endorse this conclusion. We acknowledge, however, that the argument does not by itself establish either that there…Read more
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173There’s No Need to Rethink Desert: A Reply to PummerPhilosophia 43 (4): 999-1010. 2015.Pummer : 43–77, 2014) ingeniously wraps together issues from the personal identity literature with issues from the literature on desert. However, I wish to take issue with the main conclusion that he draws, namely, that we need to rethink the following principle: Desert.: When people culpably do very wrong or bad acts, they deserve punishment in the following sense: at least other things being equal they ought to be made worse off, simply in virtue of the fact that they culpably did wrong—even i…Read more
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61Moral Worth and Severe Intellectual Disability – A Hybrid ViewIn Jerome E. Bickenbach, Franziska Felder & Barbara Schmitz (eds.), Disability and the Good Human Life, Cambridge University Press. pp. 19-49. 2013.Consider: You can save either a human or a normal adult dog from a burning building (with no risk to yourself and at little cost), but not both. However, the human is a human with a severe intellectually disability (or, as we shall say, a “SID”). Which one should you save? There is disagreement in the literature about which this issue. Two opposing camps exist, which we call “the intrinsic property camp ” and “the special relations camp.” Those in the intrinsic property camp think that in most c…Read more
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220A Critical Introduction to the Metaphysics of TimeBloomsbury Academic. 2016.What is the nature of time? Does it flow? Do the past and future exist? Drawing connections between historical and present-day questions, A Critical Introduction to the Metaphysics of Time provides an up-to-date guide to one of the most central and debated topics in contemporary metaphysics. Introducing the views and arguments of Parmenides, Plato, Aristotle, Descartes, Newton and Leibniz, this accessible introduction covers the history of the philosophy of time from the Pre-Socratics to the beg…Read more
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157A zygote could be a human: A defence of conceptionism against fission argumentsBioethics 26 (3): 136-142. 2010.In this paper I defend the view that a zygote is a human from the fission objection that is widely thought to be decisive against the view. I do so, drawing upon a recent discussion of this issue by John Burgess, by explaining in detail the metaphysical position the proponent of the view should adopt in order to rebut the objection.
Areas of Specialization
| Metaphysics and Epistemology |
| Value Theory |
| Science, Logic, and Mathematics |
| History of Western Philosophy |