•  52
    The (Very Needed) Experimental Turn in Ethics
    European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy 13 (2). 2021.
    This paper is concerned with moral experimentalism, which I describe as the stance according to which moral inquiry is grounded not in objective foundations nor in our subjective inclinations but in our active encounter with things and events and in our communicative interactions with others. The notion of moral inquiry as grounded in objective foundations and that as based on subjective inclinations have traditionally been conceived of not as two independent possibilities but as the two poles o…Read more
  •  18
    Moral Inquiry Beyond Objectivism and Subjectivism
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 35 (2): 165-175. 2021.
    There is a shared feeling among those familiar with pragmatism that, if applied in practice, the teachings of Peirce, James, Dewey, and their heirs could prove extraordinarily helpful in our current uncertain times—times of persistent moral disagreements and almost irreparable social conflicts. But to what extent is this feeling justified? What is the nature of these infelicitous circumstances? And, what makes pragmatism such a suitable approach? In this article, I claim that the main reason beh…Read more
  •  25
    The Advancement of Altruism as a Criterion of Moral Validity
    Contemporary Pragmatism 16 (4): 348-365. 2019.
    Jürgen Habermas’s discourse ethics is a method of intersubjective argumentation conceived to test the validity of moral norms on the basis of their universalizability. As some scholars have argued, Habermas’s proposal is problematic in that the process of argumentation is always affected by the circumstances of inequality and unfairness that pervade communal life and, therefore, it cannot be as inclusive and egalitarian as it needs to be in order to function effectively. In this paper, I argue t…Read more
  •  129
    Evolutionary Pragmatism and Ethics by Beth L. Eddy (review)
    The Pluralist 14 (2): 126-128. 2019.
    The fact that Dewey was born the same year in which Darwin’s On the Origin of Species was published is one of the historical coincidences most commonly mentioned by those interested in American philosophy. Such lack of originality—mine included—is perfectly justified by the fact that pragmatism would not exist, at least not as we know it, without Darwin. The intersection between philosophy and evolutionary theories has been amply explored. In this book, Beth L. Eddy offers us an additional exami…Read more