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58Superintelligent AI and meaning in lifeAI and Ethics 6 (61). 2025.This paper shows that superintelligent AI (ASI) poses a significant risk to meaning in human life by relying on Susan Wolf’s conception, according to which meaningful lives are lives of active engagement in projects of worth. The paper argues that ASI makes it less likely for humans to lead meaningful lives by reducing the possibility of human contribution and active engagement in what are deemed to be some of the most worthwhile projects of human life. The paper also criticizes Nick Bostrom’s a…Read more
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57Descriptive Rules and NormativityDisputatio 12 (57): 167-180. 2020.This work offers a challenge to the orthodox view that descriptive rules are non-normative and passive in their role and usage. It does so by arguing that, although lacking in normativity themselves, descriptive rules can be sources of normativity by way of the normative attitudes that can develop around them. That is, although descriptive rules typically depict how things are, they can also play a role in how things ought to be. In this way, the limited role that this type of rule can play as e…Read more
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57The Morality of Risking and the Reliability of RightsRes Publica. forthcoming.This work advances a novel account of the moral significance of risking. It argues that risking can be both a wrong and a harm in virtue of its negative impact on the reliability of rights, which is understood as the likelihood that rights will secure the interests that ground them. The essay also shows why the reliability account should be preferred to its main rivals.
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206Joseph Raz’s Service Conception and the Limits of KnowabilityRatio Juris 34 (3): 207-223. 2021.This essay criticizes Joseph Raz’s service conception of authority on the basis of its knowability condition. The condition states that for agents to be justified in following authoritative directives, they must be able to know (i.e., form reliable beliefs) that the authority issuing the directives is in fact legitimate. Three grounds for concern are identified. The first is that the satisfaction of the normal justification thesis (NJT), which states that the legitimacy of authorities hinges on …Read more
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971When the Risk of Harm HarmsLaw and Philosophy 36 (1): 77-100. 2017.This essay answers two questions that continue to drive debate in moral and legal philosophy; namely, ‘Is a risk of harm a wrong?’ and ‘Is a risk of harm a harm?’. The essay’s central claim is that to risk harm can be both to wrong and to harm. This stands in contrast to the respective positions of Heidi Hurd and Stephen Perry, whose views represent prominent extremes in this debate about risks. The essay shows that there is at least one category of risks – intentional impositions of risk on unc…Read more
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2941Anthropomorphism in AI: Hype and FallacyAI and Ethics. 2024.This essay focuses on anthropomorphism as both a form of hype and fallacy. As a form of hype, anthropomorphism is shown to exaggerate AI capabilities and performance by attributing human-like traits to systems that do not possess them. As a fallacy, anthropomorphism is shown to distort moral judgments about AI, such as those concerning its moral character and status, as well as judgments of responsibility and trust. By focusing on these two dimensions of anthropomorphism in AI, the essay hig…Read more
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22Constitutive and Regulative Rules: A Dispute and a ResolutionPhenomenology and Mind 13 56-66. 2017.This paper examines the distinction between constitutive and regulative rules by way of the philosophical dispute between John Searle and Joseph Raz. These theorists disagree inasmuch as Searle claims that constitutive and regulative rules represent distinct types, while Raz argues that such a differentiation is untenable. This work acknowledges the merits of Raz’s position, but argues that Searle’s distinction between constitutive and regulative rules is sound given certain refinements. The pap…Read more
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120Individual Responsibility for Collective Climate Change HarmsEthics, Policy and Environment 28 (1): 79-94. 2024.This work employs Elizabeth Cripps’ collectivist account of responsibility for climate change in order to ground an individual duty to reduce one’s GHG emissions. This is significant not only as a critique of Cripps, but also as an indication that even on some collectivist footings, individuals can be assigned primary duties to reduce their emissions. Following Cripps, this work holds the unstructured group of GHG emitters weakly collectively responsible for climate change harms. However, it arg…Read more