•  20
    Adjudicating distributive disagreement
    Synthese 198 (7): 5977-6008. 2019.
    This paper examines different mechanisms for adjudicating disagreement about distributive justice. It begins with a case where individuals have deeply conflicting convictions about distributive justice and must make a social choice regarding the distribution of goods. Four mechanisms of social choice are considered: social contract formation, Borda count vote, simple plurality vote, and minimax bargaining. I develop an agent-based model which examines which mechanisms lead to the greatest degree…Read more
  •  70
    Relational Egalitarianism and Democracy
    Journal of Moral Philosophy 18 (6): 620-649. 2021.
    Relational egalitarians argue that democratic institutions are justified by appeal to relational equality. According to the skeptical challenge, equality of political power is not required for relational equality, and the relational egalitarian case for democracy fails. I defend the relational egalitarian justification of democracy. I develop an analysis of social status and show that inequalities of power will not entail inequalities of status. I then show that inequalities of power will robust…Read more
  •  81
    Justice, Reciprocity, and the Boundaries of State Authority
    Journal of Political Philosophy 30 (1): 48-69. 2021.
    Journal of Political Philosophy, Volume 30, Issue 1, Page 48-69, March 2022.
  •  60
    Democratic Public Justification
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 50 (7): 844-861. 2020.
    Democratic institutions are appealing means of making publicly justified social choices. By allowing participation by all citizens, democracy can accommodate diversity among citizens, and by considering the perspectives of all, via ballots or debate, democratic results can approximate what the balance of reasons favors. I consider whether, and under what conditions, democratic institutions might reliably make publicly justified social decisions. I argue that conventional accounts of democracy, c…Read more
  •  75
    In “The Difference Principle Would Not Be Chosen behind the Veil of Ignorance,” Johan E. Gustafsson argues that the parties in the Original Position would not choose the Difference Principle to regulate their society’s basic structure. In reply to this internal critique, we provide two arguments. First, his choice models do not serve as a counterexample to the choice of the difference principle, as the models must assume that individual rationality scales to collective contexts in a way that beg…Read more
  •  89
    The epistemic limits of shared reasons
    European Journal of Philosophy 28 (1): 164-176. 2020.
    Accounts of public reason disagree as to the conditions a reason must meet in order to qualify as public. On one prominent account, a reason is public if, and only if, it is shareable between citizens. The shareability account, I argue, relies on an implausibly demanding assumption regarding the epistemic capabilities of citizens. When more plausible, limited, epistemic capabilities are taken into consideration, the shareability account becomes self‐defeating. Under more limited epistemic condit…Read more