•  64
    Marx und vernünftiges Tiersein
    Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 72 (6): 840-858. 2024.
    We humans are the rational animal. But how are our rationality and our animality connected? On both Aristotelian and Hegelian views, our rationality and our animality are rightly taken to form a unity. In this paper, however, it is argued that both views remain trapped within a dualism of rationality and animality. Instead, it is argued that Marx had a diagnosis of what lies behind such dualism – an individualistic and theoretical conception of our knowledge of ourselves as a manifold of self-co…Read more
  •  108
    Moorean Paradox in Practice: How Knowledge of Action Can Be First-Personal
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 102 (3): 739-755. 2024.
    We know our own intentional actions in a distinctively first-personal way. Many accounts of knowledge of intentionally doing something, A, assume that grounds for the knowledge would have to establish or indicate that it is true that one is intentionally doing A. In this paper, I argue against this assumption, showing how it entails being in a Moore-paradoxical situation. I argue that if knowledge of intentionally doing A were such that grounds for it must be truth-indicating, then one could alw…Read more
  •  139
    Representation in action
    European Journal of Philosophy 32 (3): 690-707. 2024.
    When one is intentionally doing something, one represents that thing as a goal to be accomplished. One represents it practically. How should we characterize this practical representation further? In this paper, I argue that when one is intentionally doing something, one's representation of it as a goal to be accomplished must also be knowledge that one is intentionally doing that thing. And I argue that this knowledge must itself be one's intentionally doing that thing. I aim to show, then, that…Read more
  •  189
    How to make do with events
    European Journal of Philosophy 30 (1): 245-258. 2021.
    European Journal of Philosophy, Volume 30, Issue 1, Page 245-258, March 2022.
  •  238
    The relations between agency, identification, and alienation
    Philosophical Explorations 16 (3): 243-258. 2013.
    This paper examines the relations between, on the one hand, accounts of the distinction between an agent's identifying with, as opposed to feeling alienated from, their attitudes; and on the other, metaphysical accounts of action. It claims that a commitment to an event-causal conception of agency, which would analyse agency in terms of the causal potency of psychological states and events, appears to render mandatory a particular style of account of identification and alienation – namely, the h…Read more
  •  170
    The Metaphysics and Epistemology of Settling: Some Anscombean Reservations
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 56 (6): 625-638. 2013.
    Helen Steward accepts what I call the Separation Thesis, the main tenet of which is that the movements one’s body makes when one acts are the causal results of one’s actions. I claim that this threatens to generate a pair of epistemic shortfalls: first, our perception of others’ bodily movements may not reach to their actions themselves; and, second, our own ‘knowledge in intention’ may not reach to the actual bodily movements in which the efficacy of our actions consists. I suggest we should ad…Read more