-
8Ending the Food RaceIn The Threefold Struggle: Pursuing Ecological, Social, and Personal Wellbeing in the Spirit of Daniel Quinn, Suny Press. pp. 239-268. 2022.
-
7Ending the Food RaceIn The Threefold Struggle: Pursuing Ecological, Social, and Personal Wellbeing in the Spirit of Daniel Quinn, Suny Press. pp. 269-293. 2022.
-
11Vitalizing a People, Becoming a PersonIn The Threefold Struggle: Pursuing Ecological, Social, and Personal Wellbeing in the Spirit of Daniel Quinn, Suny Press. pp. 153-183. 2022.
-
9List of Mentioned CharactersIn The Threefold Struggle: Pursuing Ecological, Social, and Personal Wellbeing in the Spirit of Daniel Quinn, Suny Press. pp. 297-301. 2022.
-
6PrologueIn The Threefold Struggle: Pursuing Ecological, Social, and Personal Wellbeing in the Spirit of Daniel Quinn, Suny Press. pp. 1-13. 2022.
-
16Attention Deficit, Yes, But Not DemocracySocial Philosophy Today 29 169-175. 2013.Ben Berger seeks to provide a number of “modest proposals” intended to prevent widespread and radical political disengagement among citizens. This is the most adverse manifestation of citizens’ invariable “attention deficit,” or their incapacity to maintain the focus and energy necessary to remain deeply and perpetually politically engaged. While attention deficit cannot be overcome, its worst effects can be kept enduringly in check, Berger argues. This is a necessary condition for the maintenan…Read more
-
118Book Review: Pluralism and Liberal Politics, written by Robert B. Talisse (review)Journal of Moral Philosophy 11 (3): 368-371. 2014.
-
101Surviving Sustainability: Degrowth, Environmental Justice, and Support for the Chronically IllJournal of Philosophy of Disability 1 175-199. 2021.The quest for ecological sustainability—specifically via prioritizing degrowth—creates significant, often overlooked challenges for the chronically ill. I focus on type-1 diabetes, treatment for which depends on nonrenewables and materials implicated in the global proliferation of toxins that harm biospheric functions. Some commentators suggest obliquely that seeking to develop ecologically sustainable treatments for type-1 shouldn’t be prioritized. Other medical concerns take precedence in a po…Read more
-
97Symbioculture: A Kinship-Based Conception of Sustainable Food SystemsEnvironmental Philosophy 18 (2): 199-225. 2021.Symbioculture involves nurturing the lives of those in one’s ecology, including the beings one eats. More specifically, it is a kinship-based conception of food and food systems rooted in Indigenous considerations of sustainability. Relations among food sources; cultivators, distributors, and eaters; and the land they share are sustainable when they function as extended kinship arrangements. Symbioculture hereby offers salient means to resist the ecocidal, agroindustrial food system that current…Read more
-
93An Ecological Conception of PersonhoodEnvironmental Ethics 45 (1): 71-92. 2023.Centering Indigenous philosophical considerations, ecologies are best understood as kinship arrangements among humans, other-than-human beings, and spiritual and abiotic entities who together through the land share a sphere of responsibility based on both care and what Daniel Wildcat calls “multigenerational spatial knowledge.” Ecologically speaking, all kin can become persons by participating in processes of socialization whereby one engages in practices and performances that support responsibl…Read more
-
28An Analysis of the Colonialist Roots of William Rees’s Case for Human Population DeclineJournal of World Philosophies 9 (2). 2025._In a recent article, William Rees defends the proposition that ecological overshoot will propel human population decline in coming decades. He rightly highlights that decreasing energy availability will contribute to this demographic shift, although he understates the significance of this phenomenon. He is also correct to expect ecological overshoot to be inadequately addressed. Yet Rees’s reasoning betrays stark __neglect of the colonial roots of ecological overshoot and why it goes unaddresse…Read more
-
79Climate Crisis as Relational CrisisFeminist Philosophy Quarterly 10 (1). 2024.It is commonly assumed that we currently face a climate crisis insofar as the climatological effects of excessive carbon emissions risk destabilizing advanced civilization and jeopardize cherished modern institutions. The threat posed by climate change is treated as unprecedented, demanding urgent action to avert apocalyptic conditions that will limit or even erase the future of all humankind. In this essay, we argue that this framework—the default climate crisis motif—perpetuates a discursive i…Read more
-
52The Threefold Struggle: Pursuing Ecological, Social, and Personal Wellbeing in the Spirit of Daniel Quinn (edited book)SUNY Press. 2022.We members of settler colonial culture—the latest form of what novelist and cultural critic Daniel Quinn calls Taker culture—are constrained by myriad institutions that leave us with little choice but to engage in practices that are profoundly damaging to the planet, to others, and to ourselves. Our path to living otherwise, Andrew Frederick Smith argues, lies in the threefold struggle, which is inspired by Quinn's focus on the interweaving roots of ecological, social, and personal wellbeing. Th…Read more
-
83On the Epistemic Incentives to Deliberate PubliclyJournal of Social Philosophy 41 (4): 454-469. 2010.
-
J. Caleb Clanton, Religion And Democratic Citizenship: Inquiry And Conviction In The American Public Square (review)Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 45 (3): 452-456. 2009.
-
1023Progressive Reckonings, Indigenous Feminist Praxis, and Resisting the Common Roots of Reproductive and Climate InjusticeInternational Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 18 (1): 61-86. 2025.White progressives in the United States are currently experiencing two profound reckonings that typically are assumed to be unrelated. On one hand, the Dobbs verdict overturned the assumption that the right to choose with respect to abortion is too socially entrenched, juridically settled, or politically sacred to be denied. On the other hand, climatological conditions for possibly having a comfortable existence are increasingly under threat in locales in which residents have come to expect to e…Read more
-
204Semantic externalism, authoritative self-knowledge, and adaptation to slow switchingActa Analytica 18 (30-31): 71-87. 2003.I here argue against the viability of Peter Ludlow’s modified version of Paul Boghossian’s argument for the incompatibility of semantic externalism and authoritative self-knowledge. Ludlow contends that slow switching is not merely actual but is, moreover, prevalent; it can occur whenever we shift between localized linguistic communities. It is therefore quite possible, he maintains, that we undergo unwitting shifts in our mental content on a regular basis. However, there is good reason to accep…Read more
-
183In Defense of HomelessnessJournal of Value Inquiry 48 (1): 33-51. 2014.In this essay, I offer a twofold defense of homelessness. First, I argue that specifiable socio-economic forms of organization that are common among the homeless and that operate at least partially independently of state and philanthropic institutions embody valuable and worthwhile ways to live and to make a living. Second, the norms underlying the current institutional response to homelessness facilitate psychological distress and social fragmentation not just among the homeless but among the h…Read more
-
468Equality and Justice: Remarks on a Necessary RelationshipHypatia 20 (2): 155-163. 2005.The processes associated with globalization have reinforced and even increased prevailing conditions of inequality among human beings with respect to their political, economic, cultural, and social opportunities. Yet-or perhaps precisely because of this trend-there has been, within political philosophy, an observable tendency to question whether equality in fact should be treated a as central value within a theory of justice. In response, I examine a number of nonegalitarian positions to try to …Read more
-
101Religion in the public spherePhilosophy and Social Criticism 40 (6): 535-554. 2014.Commonplace among deliberative theorists is the view that, when defending preferred laws and policies, citizens should appeal only to reasons they expect others reasonably to accept. This view has been challenged on the grounds that it places an undue burden on religious citizens who feel duty-bound to appeal to religious reasons to justify preferred positions. In response, I develop a conception of democratic deliberation that provides unlimited latitude regarding the sorts of reasons that can …Read more
-
185Communication and conviction: A Jamesian contribution to deliberative democracyJournal of Speculative Philosophy 21 (4). 2007.
-
30The Deliberative Impulse: Motivating Discourse in Divided Societies (edited book)Lexington Books. 2011.Andrew F. Smith argues that citizens of divided societies have three powerful incentives to engage in public deliberation_in free, open, and reasoned dialogue aimed at contributing to the establishment of well-developed laws. When contesting for political influence, or pursuing the enshrinement of one's convictions in law, deliberating publicly is a necessary condition for taking oneself to be a responsible moral, epistemic, and religious agent
-
57Michael Marder. The Philosopher’s Plant: An Intellectual HerbariumEnvironmental Philosophy 12 (2): 283-286. 2015.
-
58From Victims to Survivors? Struggling to Live Ecoconsciously in an Ecocidal CultureEnvironmental Philosophy 14 (2): 361-384. 2017.It’s hardly news that settler culture normalizes ecocide. Those of us raised as settlers who are nevertheless ecoconscious routinely blame ourselves for our failure to live up to our own best expectations when it comes to challenging the norms and practices of our culture. This leads us to overlook that we’re also—and, I think, much more so—among its victims. I outline five manifestations of victimhood routinely exhibited by the ecoconscious settler activists, scholars, and students with whom I …Read more
-
104Secularity and biblical literalism: confronting the case for epistemological diversity (review)International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 71 (3): 205-219. 2012.Stephen Carter argues that biblical literalism is predicated on an epistemological position drastically different than that maintained by mainstream scientists inasmuch as it operates on the basis of a “hermeneutic of inerrancy” with respect to the ideas laid out in the Bible. By relying on considerations offered by Charles Taylor and recent sociological studies, I contend that Carter’s thesis is incorrect. The divide between proponents and opponents of biblical literalism is ethical rather than…Read more
-
97Talisse’s Epistemic Justification of Democracy ReconsideredContemporary Pragmatism 10 (1): 131-143. 2013.
-
118Pluralism and Political LegitimacySocial Philosophy Today 19 155-177. 2003.In recent writings, both John Rawls and Jürgen Habermas address how to ensure that all reasonable citizens have the capacity to live a good life when there exist in modern society a wide variety of competing conceptions thereof. Yet, according to James Bohman, both thinkers in fact fail to resolve this “dilemma of the good.” He offers a deliberative conception of democracy intended to make up for their shortcomings. I argue, however, that Bohman’s conception covertly relies upon moderately perfe…Read more
-
137William James and the Politics of Moral ConflictTransactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 40 (1). 2004.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America