•  98
    Slaves of the Passions (review)
    Philosophical Quarterly 63 (251): 384-387. 2013.
  •  140
    Uggles and Muggles: Wedgwood on normative thought and justification (review)
    Philosophical Studies 151 (3). 2010.
  •  143
    Reasons without humans
    Analysis 77 (3): 586-595. 2017.
    1. Brian Hedden, in this impressively learned and ingenious, if somewhat maddening book,1 1 defends a view he calls Time-slice Rationality, a view comprising two central claims. They are: Synchronicity : All requirements of rationality are synchronic. Impartiality : In determining how you rationally ought to be at a time, your beliefs about what attitudes you have at other times play the same role as your beliefs about what attitudes other people have.
  •  30
    Realism and idealism in the theory of value
    Dissertation, St. Andrews. 1995.
    This thesis defends an account of value which emphasizes the central place occupied by experiences among the objects of evaluation, a point that is particularly stark in the case of aesthetic value, to which a chapter is devoted that adumbrates the wider understanding of value subsequently defended. More generally it is argued that values do not transcend the attitudes and institutions in which they are embodied. They nonetheless enjoy in virtue of their structuring by norms of consistency, stab…Read more
  •  60
    Review of Allan Gibbard, Reconciling Our Aims: In Search of Bases for Ethics (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (9). 2009.
  •  152
    The millionaire’s idle, talentless and self-centered daughter inherits a large sum of money that she does not really deserve. The victim of kidnapping rots in a cell in 1980s Beirut in a captivity that springs not from any wrong he has done but from his ill-fortune in being in the wrong place at the wrong time. The hard-working, brilliant and self-denying Nobel Prize-winning scientist receives a large cheque for his extraordinarily productive labours. The murderer spends decades in jail for the …Read more
  •  285
    Review: Actions, Motives and Causes (review)
    Philosophical Quarterly 58 (231). 2008.
    In this book Alfred Mele [Motivation and Agency, 2003 OUP] seeks to elaborate and defend a neo-Davidsonian understanding of human agency which is fundamentally causalist: intentional actions are, he thinks, caused and caused in such a way that a causal explanation of them is available in terms of the desires and intentions of the agent.
  •  51
    Review of Terry Horgan, mark Timmons (eds.), Metaethics After Moore (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2007 (3). 2007.
  •  187
    Pleasure, Desire and Practical Reason
    Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 14 (2): 143-149. 2011.
    This paper examines the role of stability in the constitution of pleasure and desire, its relevance to the intimate ways the two are related and to their role in the constitution of practical reason
  •  499
    Reasons for action: Justification vs. explanation
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2010.
    Modern philosophical literature distinguishes between explanatory reasons and justifying reasons. The former are reasons we appeal to in attempting to explain actions and attitudes. The latter are reasons we appeal to in attempting to justify them.
  •  105
    ”Review of Terence Cuneo„ The Normative Web: An Argument for Moral Realism (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2008 (6). 2008.
  •  111
    Preferences in their Place
    Environmental Values 9 (4): 431-451. 2000.
    In at least some of their forms, Cost-Benefit techniques for the evaluation of environmental projects and policies treat the preferences of citizens as the sole determinants of the value of outcomes. There are two salient ways in which this supposition might be defended. The first is metaethical and appeals to considerations about how we must understand talk of environmental and other values. The second is political and appeals to considerations about democratic legitimacy and the proper aims of…Read more
  •  203
    Noncognitivism and wishfulness
    Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 6 (3): 265-274. 2003.
    It has recently been argued by Cian Dorr that if noncognitivism is true, inferences to factual conclusions from premises at least one of which is moral must be condemned as irrational. For, given a noncognitivist understanding of what it is to accept such premises, such reasoning would be wishful thinking: irrationally revising our views about the world to make them cohere with our desires and feelings. This he takes to be a reductio of noncognitivism. I argue that no compelling case to this eff…Read more
  •  519
    On becoming extinct
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 83 (3). 2002.
    From an impersonal, timeless perspective it is hard to identify good reasons why it should matter that human extinction comes later rather than sooner, particularly if we accept that it does not matter how many human beings there are. We cannot appeal to the natural narrative shape of human history for there is no such thing. We have more local and particular concerns to which we can better appeal but only if an impersonal, timeless perspective is abandoned: only from a generation–centred perspe…Read more
  •  289
    Naturalism without tears
    Ratio 22 (1): 1-18. 2009.
    Parfit argues that naturalistic theories that seek to understand normative concepts either as simply descriptive of certain natural facts about our desires or as expressive of our desires commit us to a bleak normative nihilism whereby nothing matters. I here defend such naturalism, in particular its expressivist variety, against this charge. It is true that such views commit us to there being no reasons as Parfit understands them. But for Parfit to suppose that equivalent to there being no reas…Read more
  •  291
    Smith has defended the rationalist's conceptual claim that moral requirements are categorical requirements of reason, arguing that no status short of this would make sense of our taking these requirements as seriously as we do. Against this I argue that Smith has failed to show either that our moral commitments would be undermined by possessing only an internal, contextual justification or that they need presuppose any expectation that rational agents must converge on their acceptance. His claim…Read more
  •  52
    On becoming redundant or what computers shouldn't do
    Journal of Applied Philosophy 18 (1). 2001.
    I argue here that the development of machines that provide for us what we could previously provide for ourselves may sometimes be a dubious blessing. For the value of many goods is not independent of the way in which they are produced and in particular of the human contribution to their production. With a large range of goods it may matter to us both that people rather than machines contribute to their production and that we ourselves make some such contribution. We have a need to be constructiv…Read more
  •  3
    1. how to share a flat
    In Russ Shafer-Landau (ed.), Oxford Studies in Metaethics, Oxford University Press. pp. 5--175. 2010.
  •  61
    La Révolution est un bloc? Wallace on Affirmation and Regret
    Journal of Applied Philosophy 34 (3): 420-428. 2016.
  •  208
    Immortality
    Cogito 9 (2): 164-169. 1995.
  • Introduction
    In James Lenman & Yonatan Shemmer (eds.), Constructivism in Practical Philosophy, Oxford University Press. 2012.
  •  4
    Expressivism and constructivism
    In James Lenman & Yonatan Shemmer (eds.), Constructivism in Practical Philosophy, Oxford University Press. 2012.
  •  120
    Gibbardian Humility: Moral Fallibility and Moral Smugness
    Journal of Value Inquiry 48 (2): 235-245. 2014.
    Those whose Way is not the same cannot take counsel together.Confucius, Analects XV, 40Quasi-Realism and Fundamental Disagreement: Egan’s ProblemI believe that it is wrong to open your boiled egg at the big end. You believe that it is not wrong to open your egg at the big end. We are at an impasse. The impasse might not be deep. One of us might just be wrong on some matter of prosaic nonnormative fact. But perhaps that is not the case. Even if we both came to be fully informed about all relevant…Read more
  •  172
    Ethics Without Errors
    Ratio 26 (4): 391-409. 2013.
    I argue against the claim that we should adopt a moral error theory. The intelligibility of our moral practice need offer no questionable metaphysical hostages to fortune. The two most credible policy recommendations that might follow from moral error theory, abolitionism and prescriptive fictionalism, are not very credible
  • HOOKER, B.-Ideal Code, Real World
    Philosophical Books 44 (2): 181-182. 2003.
  •  45