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438A unified framework for addiction: Vulnerabilities in the decision processBehavioral and Brain Sciences 31 (4): 415-437. 2008.The understanding of decision-making systems has come together in recent years to form a unified theory of decision-making in the mammalian brain as arising from multiple, interacting systems (a planning system, a habit system, and a situation-recognition system). This unified decision-making system has multiple potential access points through which it can be driven to make maladaptive choices, particularly choices that entail seeking of certain drugs or behaviors. We identify 10 key vulnerabili…Read more
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98Addiction as vulnerabilities in the decision processBehavioral and Brain Sciences 31 (4): 461-487. 2008.In our target article, we proposed that addiction could be envisioned as misperformance of a decision-making machinery described by two systems (deliberative and habit systems). Several commentators have argued that Pavlovian learning also produces actions. We agree and note that Pavlovian action-selection will provide several additional vulnerabilities. Several commentators have suggested that addiction arises from sociological parameters. We note in our response how sociological effects can ch…Read more
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85Fortifying the PetardPhilosophia Christi 20 (2): 357-363. 2018.Erik Wielenberg argued that William Lane Craig’s attack against nontheistic ethical models is detrimental to Craig’s Divine Command Theory (DCT) as follows: Craig claims it is unacceptable for ethical models to include logically necessary connections without providing an explanation of why such connections hold. Yet Craig posits certain logically necessary connections without providing an explanation of them. Wielenberg concluded that “Craig is hoisted by his own petard.” In this paper I respond…Read more
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88Debunking Nontheistic Moral RealismPhilosophia Christi 17 (2): 353-367. 2015.Evolutionary Debunking Arguments argue that, if naturalism and evolution are true, then our moral beliefs are merely human constructs nature selected because they increased our prospects for survival and reproduction. Atheist Erik Wielenberg disagrees; he has recently argued that morality could be objectively real, and that we could have moral knowledge, even if naturalism and evolution are true. I argue that Wielenberg is unsuccessful in his attempt to deflect a major concern raised by EDA prop…Read more
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81Introduction to the American Academy of Religion Panel Forum on Erik Wielenberg’s Robust EthicsPhilosophia Christi 20 (2): 331-332. 2018.Erik Wielenberg is the most important contemporary critic of theistic metaethics. Wielenberg maintains that God is unnecessary for objective morality because moral truths exist as brute facts of the universe that have no, and need no, foundation. At times his description of these brute facts make them sound like abstract objects or Platonic forms. At the American Academy of Religion’s annual meeting in Boston in November of 2017, we organized an Evangelical Philosophical Society panel to discuss…Read more
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Bethel College and Seminary, St. Paul MinnesotaRegular Faculty
Arden Hills, Minnesota, United States of America
Areas of Interest
| Epistemology |