•  15
    It’s a High-IQ Match! in advance
    Social Theory and Practice. forthcoming.
    Recently, countries such as China, India, Iran and Japan have introduced state-run dating apps in an attempt to increase fertility rates. However, dating apps could serve another important social goal that has thus far been largely neglected by policymakers and scholars: increasing population intelligence by facilitating certain forms of assortative mating. This article offers a qualified defense of using dating apps to raise the average intelligence—which is strongly associated, and likely caus…Read more
  •  293
    Many scholars and laypeople believe that, to address global warming, residents of high-income countries should limit themselves to having no more than one biological child. This article calls this view into question, referring to it as ‘climate-based procreative limitarianism’ (CPL). However, rather than arguing that the climate-related harms of procreation are outweighed by other considerations—such as individuals’ interests in parenting or in having biologically related offspring—it finds stro…Read more
  •  240
    This article argues that embryo selection for intelligence (ESFI) offers a promising and ethically defensible strategy for eliminating extreme poverty. Drawing on evidence that national cognitive ability is a major driver of economic prosperity, I contend that enhancing intelligence through polygenic embryo selection could yield substantial and enduring gains that surpass the modest and often transient effects of traditional educational and nutritional interventions, while also being herita…Read more
  •  61
    Dating Apps and the Right to an Explanation
    with Kristian González Barman
    Journal of Applied Philosophy 43 (2): 319-338. 2026.
    This article argues that in countries where dating apps have become the primary means of meeting romantic partners and promise to help users find love, individuals should be entitled to access certain information about how their algorithms function. Specifically, we advocate for a legal right to an explanation that addresses the following, not necessarily exhaustive, questions: (i) Is a given dating app, x, designed to gratuitously prolong users' quests for romantic relationships? (ii) What non‐…Read more
  •  21
    Why Treat One’s Children as Equals?
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 54 (8): 623-631. 2024.
    In “Parental Love and Filial Equality,” Giacomo Floris and Riccardo Spotorno offer an explanation for why parents should treat their children as equals. The authors argue that this moral obligation is grounded in parents’ duty to love their children in an attitudinal, though not necessarily emotional, sense. This duty, they contend, requires them to disregard variations in their children’s status-conferring properties, as long as those properties meet a minimum threshold. This article argues tha…Read more
  •  28
    Narrow competencies as a basis for preferential hiring
    Economics and Philosophy 1-23. forthcoming.
    This article defends a new type of preferential hiring. Rather than compensating groups for past or present employment-related discrimination, it seeks to ensure that groups with disproportionate unemployment rates that are due significantly – but not necessarily wholly – to their members having relatively narrow competencies, such as autistic individuals and people with hearing loss, ADHD and lower education levels, are prioritized for jobs that match their abilities. After defending such compe…Read more
  •  30
    Wanting to be a best friend
    Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology. forthcoming.
  •  31
    Dating apps as tools for social engineering
    Ethics and Information Technology 27 (1). 2024.
    In a bid to boost their below-replacement fertility levels, some countries, such as China, India, Iran, and Japan, have launched state-sponsored dating apps, with more potentially following. However, the use of dating apps as tools for social engineering has been largely neglected by political theorists and public policy experts. This article fills this gap. While acknowledging the risks and historical baggage of social engineering, the article provides a qualified defense of using these apps fo…Read more
  •  47
    Scholars such as S. Matthew Liao have argued that parents have a moral duty to love their children. However, there exists an important related parental duty that has not been defended yet. Besides loving their children, or at least trying to do so, this article argues that at least during their children’s childhood, parents should make efforts to love their children equally insofar as they do not already do so. After clarifying the content of this duty, I defend it by suggesting that having a pr…Read more
  •  57
    Care shortages and duties to age abroad
    Nursing Ethics 32 (5): 1332-1342. 2025.
    Many higher-income countries have shortages of care-workers, which is unlikely to change in the foreseeable future as virtually all of these societies are ageing. The philosophical literature on this problem has concentrated mostly on the merits and demerits of different policy solutions, especially on the recruitment of foreign care-workers and on investments in care robots and other relevant technologies. However, the question of what moral duties, if any, private individuals have to help addr…Read more
  •  1
    In more than 20% of countries, a single religion is recognized in the constitution. This article argues that there are good reasons for opposing such ‘mono-recognition’ as it fails to show due concern to members of constitutionally unrecognized (non-extremist) religions. Yet rather than opting for disestablishment as Sweden did in 2000, I show that there may be a better alternative in many cases: To constitutionally recognize a variety of religions. After distinguishing synchronic forms of plura…Read more
  •  115
    Breaking Up Rationally
    The Journal of Ethics 29 (2): 215-236. 2025.
    The end of a long-term romantic relationship ranks among the most stressful and momentous events in life. Thus, the decision of whether to break up with someone whom one has been with for many years should generally be made very carefully. Unfortunately, decision theory is often thought to be unable to provide rational guidance in such high-stake life choices due to the outcomes’ presumed transformative character. The present paper shows how agents can rationally decide whether to leave their ro…Read more
  •  63
    Dating apps as tools for social engineering
    Ethics and Information Technology 27 (1): 1-13. 2025.
    In a bid to boost their below-replacement fertility levels, some countries, such as China, India, Iran, and Japan, have launched state-sponsored dating apps, with more potentially following. However, the use of dating apps as tools for social engineering has been largely neglected by political theorists and public policy experts. This article fills this gap. While acknowledging the risks and historical baggage of social engineering, the article provides a qualified defense of using these apps fo…Read more
  •  69
    Three Conceptions of Best Friends
    International Journal of Applied Philosophy 38 (1): 77-92. 2024.
    We often speak of our own “best friends” and those of other people. But what does it mean for someone to be a best friend? While there is a large empirical literature studying the antecedents and consequences of best friendships and a small body of philosophical research on this topic, this question has not been addressed in detail. In this article, my aim is to fill this lacuna by distinguishing three different conceptions of best friends based on the semantic properties of the term and the way…Read more
  •  326
    Over the past decade, many politicians and celebrities in North America have found themselves embroiled in scandals that involved them having worn black make-up and in at least one incident white make-up. In most of these cases, the used make-up was part of a costume for Halloween, Purim, Carnival, or a themed party. This article challenges the view that wearing cross-racial make-up on such occasions as part of personal costumes—as opposed to costumes that are integral to specific cultural tradi…Read more
  •  67
    The Dysgenics Objection to Longtermism
    Futures 162 (103417): 1-13. 2024.
    Strong longtermism maintains that how we should act morally is determined almost entirely by the expected effects on the welfare of our descendants existing thousands if not millions of years into the future, who might include both other humans and any artificial agents with a comparable or higher moral status that we end up creating. It is based on three key assumptions: (i) that our descendants will have a moral status that is at least as high as ours and therefore should not have their welfar…Read more
  •  69
    Should Men Vacuum More?
    Public Affairs Quarterly 38 (3): 196-212. 2024.
    Cross-national surveys show that among heterosexual couples who share a household, women tend to perform more housework than their male partners. Many feminists believe that this must be unjust, the assumption being that justice requires an equal distribution of housework between the sexes. My aim in this contribution is to challenge this view. To do so, I distinguish three possible interpretations of it. The first says that heterosexual co-residential partners, construed broadly to include marr…Read more
  •  109
    Neurodiversity and the Neuro-Neutral State
    American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 15 (4): 264-273. 2024.
    Over the past decade, many philosophers have argued that to respect the moral equality of their citizens, states should be neutral toward certain forms of diversity among their populations. Areas in which the state neutrality has been advocated include, but are not limited to, citizens’ different religions; languages; and sexual orientations. However, there remains an important area where its normative (ir)relevance has not been discussed: That of neurodiversity. After identifying several ways i…Read more
  •  81
    Autism and the Case Against Job Interviews
    Neuroethics 17 (2): 1-7. 2024.
    Unemployment rates among autistic people are high even among those with low-support needs. While a variety of measures is needed to address this problem, this article defends one that has not been defended in detail and that has profound implications for contemporary hiring practices. Building on empirical research showing that job interviews are a major contributor to autistic unemployment, it argues that such interviews should be abolished in many cases for autistic and non-autistic people ali…Read more
  •  117
    State-Run Dating Apps: Are They Morally Desirable?
    Philosophy and Technology 37 (1): 1-21. 2024.
    In a bid to boost fertility levels, Iran and Japan have recently launched their own dating apps, with more countries likely to follow. The aim of this article is to consider whether state-run dating apps are morally desirable, which is a question that has not received any scholarly attention. It finds that such apps have at least two benefits that collectively, if not individually, render their introduction to be welcomed provided certain conditions are met. These benefits are that they are bett…Read more
  •  99
    Microaggressions in everyday life: Race, gender, and sexual orientation
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 62 (3): 391-401. 2024.
    Being the victim of a microaggression, that is, a relatively minor act of hostility that targets someone's (marginalized) social identity, can be distressing, but so can merely being in doubt over whether one has been the victim of such aggression. To address this last problem, Regina Rini has proposed a novel understanding of microaggressions that is meant to eliminate such doubts. On her “Ambiguous Experience Account,” whenever members of marginalized groups believe they might have been subjec…Read more
  •  49
    Autonomy and end-of-life
    In Ben Colburn (ed.), The Routledge Handbook of Autonomy, Routledge. pp. 442-449. 2022.
    All of our lives come to an end. For most people in Western societies, this is not until they reach a relatively advanced age, often 80 years and above. For others, death comes earlier, whether unexpectedly as when someone dies in car crash, or after a short or long period of physical decline as when a middle-aged person develops terminal cancer. To the extent that people experience such a stage of decline, usually with the prior knowledge that it will result in their death, we tend to speak of …Read more
  •  23
    Wearing black make-up to impersonate black individuals has become highly controversial in many countries, even when it is part of long-standing cultural traditions. Prominent examples of such traditions include Saint Nicolas celebrations in the Netherlands (which feature a black character known as “Black Pete” who hands out candy to children), Epiphany parades in Spain (which feature impersonations of the biblical king Balthasar who is traditionally portrayed as black) and the annual Zulu parade…Read more
  •  52
    Five arguments against single state religions
    Ethnicities 21 (1). 2021.
    A significant proportion of states grants constitutional recognition to a single religion, leaving various other religions within society constitutionally unrecognised. Many philosophers believe that this is problematic even when such recognition is (almost) wholly symbolic. The four most common and prima facie plausible objections to what I call ‘mono-recognition’ are that it alienates citizens who do not adhere to the constitutionally recognised religion; that it symbolically subordinates thes…Read more
  •  97
    Selling visibility-boosts on dating apps: a problematic practice?
    Ethics and Information Technology 25 (2): 1-8. 2023.
    Love, sex, and physical intimacy are some of the most desired goods in life and they are increasingly being sought on dating apps such as Tinder, Bumble, and Badoo. For those who want a leg up in the chase for other people’s attention, almost all of these apps now offer the option of paying a fee to boost one’s visibility for a certain amount of time, which may range from 30 min to a few hours. In this article, I argue that there are strong moral grounds and, in countries with laws against uncon…Read more
  •  110
    Is swearing morally innocent?
    Ratio 36 (2): 159-168. 2023.
    Some philosophers believe that swearing is morally innocent insofar as it is non‐abusive and vulgarities are being used, such as when people exclaim “s**t!” or “f**k!” This article shows this view to be mistaken. I start by arguing that taking offense at non‐abusive vulgar swearing is not irrational, before arguing that, even if it were, such swearing would still not always be justified. The fact that many of us find it hard to overcome profanity‐induced offense, along with the fact that its exi…Read more
  •  495
    Can Monarchies Be Justified?
    Law, Ethics and Philosophy 9 8-24. 2023.
    Although 43 countries have a monarch as their head of state, the question of whether monarchies can be morally justified has been neglected by contemporary philosophers. In this article, I argue that it is doubtful whether any existing monarchies can be morally justified. As I show, they all suffer from one or more of the following defects: they flout democratic principles; they are non-meritocratic; and/or they fail to provide at least some royals with an adequate range of lifestyle options. Ho…Read more
  •  94
    Autism and the Right to a Hypersensitivity-Friendly Workspace
    Public Health Ethics 14 (3): 281-287. 2021.
    Many individuals on the autism spectrum are hypersensitive to certain sensory stimuli. For this group, as well as for non-autistic individuals with sensory processing disorders, being exposed to e.g. fluorescent lights, perfume odours, and various sounds and noises can be real torment. In this article, I consider the normative implications of such offence for the design of office spaces, which is a topic that has not received any attention from philosophers. After identifying different ways in w…Read more
  •  102
    Lowering Toilet Seats
    Etikk I Praksis - Nordic Journal of Applied Ethics 1 21-31. 2022.
    _Many people who stand to pee raise the toilet seat so that they have a larger target to aim at. However, if the seat is left in this position, any subsequent toilet user who defecates or pees sitting down will need to lower the seat. Some of us believe that this inconvenience should not be visited on those who pee sitting down, while others deny that there is anything wrong with leaving the toilet seat in the position that you used it. This article offers the first scholarly defense of the seat…Read more