•  16
    Spinoza’s philosophy contains a theory of money very different from that in the economics textbooks, which treat money as an instrument of voluntary exchange. This is because his theory of desire rules it highly unlikely that agents should enter into voluntary exchanges at all. What appears to be voluntary exchange is really something else: a type of retaliatory expropriation, in which money plays a crucial pacifying role. Spinoza warns that money can, however, fail in this function if it become…Read more
  •  124
    Different beasts: humans and animals in Spinoza and the Zhuangzi
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 33 (3): 699-705. 2024.
    Volume 33, Issue 3, May 2025, Page 699-705.
  •  56
    Précis of The Philosophy of Hope: Beatitude in Spinoza
    Res Philosophica 101 (3): 591-601. 2024.
  •  128
    Susan Stebbing’s Logical Interventionism
    History and Philosophy of Logic 42 (2): 101-117. 2021.
    We examine a contribution L. Susan Stebbing made to the understanding of critical thinking and its relation to formal logic. Stebbing took expertise in formal logic to authorise logical intervention in public debate, specifically in assessing of the validity of everyday reasoning. She held, however, that formal logic is purely the study of logical form. Given the problems of ascertaining logical form in any particular instance, and that logical form does not always track informal validity, it is…Read more
  •  127
    VII—Spinoza’s Unquiet Acquiescentia
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 120 (2): 145-163. 2020.
    For Spinoza, the highest thing we can hope for is acquiescentia in se ipso—acquiescence in oneself. As an ethical ideal, this might appear as a complacent quietism, a licence to accept the way you are and give up hope of improving either yourself or the world. I argue that the opposite is the case. Self-acquiescence in Spinoza’s sense is a very challenging goal: it requires a form of self-understanding that is extremely difficult to attain. It also involves occupying a daring and radical politic…Read more
  •  45
    The Philosophy of Debt
    Routledge. 2015.
    I owe you a dinner invitation, you owe ten years on your mortgage, and the government owes billions. We speak confidently about these cases of debt, but is that concept clear in its meaning? This book aims to clarify the concept of debt so we can find better answers to important moral and political questions. This book seeks to accomplish two things. The first is to clarify the concept of debt by examining how the word is used in language. The second is to develop a general, principled account o…Read more