•  2
    Animalization
    Philosophical Quarterly 76 (3): 1186-1208. 2026.
    Although the concept of objectification is seen as a valuable tool in feminist theorizing, far less attention has been paid to animalization: treating or regarding a person as a nonhuman animal. I argue that animalization is a distinctive category of wrongdoing, modeling a theory of the phenomenon on Kantian theories of objectification in feminist philosophy. Actions are animalizing, I claim, when they embody a kind of disregard for a person's characteristically human capacities that are analogo…Read more
  •  702
    Dehumanization: From Ethics to Metaphysics (and Back)
    European Journal of Philosophy 1291-1307. 2025.
    Although it has become increasingly common to theorize about dehumanization, there is a lack of even basic agreement as to how to define the concept, nor is it clear why theorists should prefer one rival concept over another. So, which concept of dehumanization should we use? I propose that this question is best addressed by considering what the concept’s function(s) might be, what the concept is for—specifically, which concern(s) the concept might satisfy. I then argue that one function of the …Read more
  •  766
    The Wrong of Eugenic Sterilization
    Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 21 (4): 735-749. 2024.
    I defend a novel account of the wrong of subjecting people to non-consensual sterilization (NCS), particularly in the context of the state-sponsored eugenics programmes once prevalent in the United States. What makes the eugenic practice of NCS distinctively wrong, I claim, is its dehumanizing core: the fact that it is tantamount to treating people as nonhuman animals, thereby expressing the degrading social meaning that they have the value of animals. The practice of NCS is prima facie seriousl…Read more
  •  653
    Many bioethicists accept the Consciousness Condition (CC): roughly, that a person can be wronged only if she can be benefited or harmed, which is possible only if she retains the capacity for consciousness. We argue that CC is false. People can be wronged even if they permanently lack consciousness and thus have no ability to experience benefit or harm. In support of this claim, we introduce a clinical case in which a profoundly vegetative patient is subjected to unauthorized pelvic examinations…Read more
  •  469
    Despite its prevalence today, the practice of purely performative resuscitation (PPR)—paradigmatically, the “slow code”—has attracted more critics in bioethics than defenders. The most common criticism of the slow code is that it's fundamentally deceptive or harmful, while the most common justification offered is that it may benefit the patient's loved ones, by symbolically honoring the patient or the care team's relationship with the family. I argue that critics and defenders of the slow code e…Read more
  •  904
    The Thin End of the Wedge?: The Moral Puzzle of Anorexia Nervosa
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy. 2026.
    The practice of force-feeding dangerously malnourished patients with anorexia nervosa (AN) raises a puzzle for clinical ethics. Force-feeding AN patients may seem justified to save their lives and to help them recover from a debilitating pathological condition. Yet clinical ethics seems committed to a robust anti-paternalism principle, on which it is normally wrong to force treatment on decisionally capacitated patients for their own good. And some AN patients do retain decisional capacity, at l…Read more
  •  836
    Animalization
    Philosophical Quarterly. 2024.
    Although the concept of objectification is seen as a valuable tool in feminist theorizing, far less attention has been paid to animalization: treating or regarding a person as a nonhuman animal. I argue that animalization is a distinctive category of wrongdoing, modeling a theory of the phenomenon on Kantian theories of objectification in feminist philosophy. Actions are animalizing, I claim, when they embody a kind of disregard for a person's characteristically human capacities that are analogo…Read more
  •  78
    Do Suicide Attempters Have a Right Not to Be Stabilized in an Emergency?
    Hastings Center Report 54 (2): 22-33. 2024.
    The standard of care in the United States favors stabilizing any adult who arrives in an emergency department after a failed suicide attempt, even if he appears decisionally capacitated and refuses life‐sustaining treatment. I challenge this ubiquitous practice. Emergency clinicians generally have a moral obligation to err on the side of stabilizing even suicide attempters who refuse such interventions. This obligation reflects the fact that it is typically infeasible to determine these patients…Read more
  •  1060
    The standard of care in the United States favors stabilizing any adult who arrives in an emergency department after a failed suicide attempt, even if he appears decisionally capacitated and refuses life-sustaining treatment. I challenge this ubiquitous practice. Emergency clinicians generally have a moral obligation to err on the side of stabilizing even suicide attempters who refuse such interventions. This obligation reflects the fact that it is typically infeasible to determine these patients…Read more
  •  1468
    Humanism: A Reconsideration
    Journal of the American Philosophical Association 10 (3): 542-561. 2024.
    Humanism is the view that people treat others inhumanely when we fail to see them as human beings, so that our treatment of them will tend to be more humane when we (fully) see their humanity. Recently, humanist views have been criticized on the grounds that the perpetrators of inhumanity regard their victims as human and treat them inhumanely partly for this reason. I argue that the two most common objections to humanist views (and their relatives) are unpersuasive: not only does the evidence m…Read more
  •  64
    Objectification and Domination
    Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 8 (n/a): 406-440. 2021.
    I resolve a tension between two prominent strands of feminist social critique. On the first, the domination of women consists largely in their objectification, and the objectifying character of such domination primarily explains why it is wrong. On the second, some salient forms of domination have a distinctively intersubjective dimension that makes them crucially unlike our standard modes of relating to objects. Yet in that case, how could characterizing these acts as objectifying capture why t…Read more
  •  928
    I extend my account of social invisibility and interpersonal recognition by applying it to one form of racism: racial alienation—the failure to emotionally identify with members of another racial group on the basis of their race. I argue that leading views of racism in the analytic tradition threaten to contravene the conviction that racial alienation involves a misrecognition of the other group’s humanity. The pitfall is best avoided by developing a conception of interpersonal awareness that is…Read more
  •  680
    Interpersonal Invisibility and the Recognition of Other Persons
    In David Kaspar (ed.), Explorations in Ethics, Palgrave-macmillan. pp. 219-242. 2020.
    I argue that we get an account of social invisibility that best fits our practice of moral complaint if we reject orthodoxy and accept a quite different view of what it is to see another person as a person. On my view, seeing a person as a person is inseparable from caring about her in person-specific ways—hence from a disposition to a range of interpersonal emotional responses to her point of view. Thus, a person’s humanity is invisible to us, according to this picture, when we are unreceptive …Read more
  •  72
    Review of Smith, On Inhumanity: Dehumanization and How to Resist It
    Philosophical Quarterly 71 (3): 647-650. 2021.
    On Inhumanity: Dehumanization and How to Resist It. BY LIVINGSTONE SMITHDAVID.
  •  151
    Kantian Constructivism and the Authority of Others
    European Journal of Philosophy 28 (1): 77-92. 2020.
    I argue that Christine Korsgaard's Kantian constructivism cannot accommodate our obligations to others. Because she holds that all of our obligations are grounded in our obligating ourselves, she is committed to the view that our obligations to others are grounded in corresponding obligations to ourselves. Yet this conclusion is objectionable on substantive moral grounds. The problem is that she embraces an egocentric conception of authority, on which we originally have the authority to obligate…Read more