•  281
    Alienation, Resonance, and Experience in Theories of Well-Being
    Philosophia 51 (4): 2225-2240. 2023.
    Each person has a special relation to his or her own well-being. This rough thought, which can be sharpened in different ways, is supposed to substantially count against objectivist theories on which one can intrinsically benefit from, or be harmed by, factors that are independent of one’s desires, beliefs, and other attitudes. It is often claimed, contra objectivism, that one cannot be _alienated_ from one’s own interests, or that improvements in a person’s well-being must _resonate_ with that …Read more
  • The Value of Heterogeneous Pleasures
    Journal of Happiness Studies 19 (8): 2303-2314. 2018.
    Pleasure is one of the most obvious candidates for directly improving wellbeing. Hedonists claim it is the only feature that can intrinsically make life better for the one living it, and that all of wellbeing derives from the relative pleasantness and unpleasantness of conscious experience. But Hedonism is incompatible with the ‘heterogeneity’ of pleasure: it cannot allow that distinct pleasures can feel completely differently, if experiences count as pleasant due to how they feel. I argue that …Read more
  • Cognitive Moral Thoughts Expressed in Prescriptive Language
    Ethical Perspectives 24 (4): 595-623. 2017.
  •  56
    Epicurean Hedonism as Qualitative Hedonism
    Journal of Value Inquiry 52 (4): 411-427. 2018.
    Epicurus’ theory of what is good for a person is hedonistic: only pleasure has intrinsic value. Critics object that Epicurus is committed to advocating sensualist excess, since hedonism seems both to imply that more pleasure is always of some good for you, and to recommend even debauched, sensual kinds of pleasure. However, Epicurus can respond to this objection much like J. S. Mill responds to the objection that hedonism is a “doctrine worthy only of swine”. I argue that Epicurus’ hedonism is a…Read more
  •  61
    How Pleasures Make Life Better
    Kriterion - Journal of Philosophy 31 (1): 1-24. 2017.
    In this paper, I argue that Phenomenalists about pleasure can concede a key claim, Heterogeneity, commonly used to object to their theory. They also can then vindicate the aspirations of J. S. Mill’s doctrine of higher pleasures, while grounding their value claims in a naturalistic metaethics. But once Phenomenalists concede Heterogeneity they can no longer consistently endorse Hedonism as the correct theory of wellbeing, since they implicitly commit to recognizing distinct kinds of pleasure tha…Read more
  •  397
  •  647
    Non-descriptive negation for normative sentences
    Philosophical Quarterly 66 (262): 1-25. 2016.
    Frege-Geach worries about embedding and composition have plagued metaethical theories like emotivism, prescriptivism and expressivism. The sharpened point of such criticism has come to focus on whether negation and inconsistency have to be understood in descriptivist terms. Because they reject descriptivism, these theories must offer a non-standard account of the meanings of ethical and normative sentences as well as related semantic facts, such as why certain sentences are inconsistent with e…Read more
  •  145
    Should Expressivism Be a Theory at the Level of Metasemantics?
    Thought: A Journal of Philosophy 5 (1): 13-22. 2016.
    Michael Ridge argues that metaethical expressivism can avoid its most worrisome problems by going ‘Ecumenical’. Ridge emphasizes that he aims to develop expressivism at the level of metasemantics rather than at the level of semantics. This is supposed to allow him to avoid a mentalist semantics of attitudes and instead offer an orthodox, truth-conditional or propositional semantics. However, I argue that Ridge's theory remains committed to mentalist semantics, and that his move to go metasemanti…Read more
  •  314
    Review of Michael Ridge Impassioned Belief (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2014. 2014.
    A critical review of Michael Ridge's book Impassioned Belief.