•  29
    Impartiality and fair play revisited
    Journal of Political Philosophy 31 (3): 315-336. 2023.
    Journal of Political Philosophy, EarlyView.
  •  133
    Semiotic objections to market exchange of a good or service maintain that such exchanges signal an inappropriate attitude to the good or to associated individuals, and that this provides a weighty reason against having or participating in such markets. This style of argument has recently come under withering attack from Jason Brennan and Peter Jaworski (2015a, 2015b). They point out that the significance of any market exchange is explained by a contingent semiotic norm. Given the tremendous valu…Read more
  •  20
    Beyond Profit and Politics: Reciprocity and the Role of For-Profit Business
    Journal of Business Ethics 159 (1): 239-251. 2019.
    Standard accounts of reciprocal citizenship hold that citizens have a duty to participate in politics. Against this, several business ethicists and philosophers have recently argued that people can satisfy their obligations of civic reciprocity non-politically, by owning, managing, or working in for-profit businesses. In this article, I reject both the standard and the market accounts of reciprocal citizenship. Against the market view, I show that the ordinary work of profit maximization cannot …Read more
  •  36
    Bearing Witness: The Duty of Non‐indifference and the Case for Reading the News
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 104 (2): 368-391. 2023.
    Ignorance of current events is ordinarily treated as a moral failing. In this article, I argue that much of this ire is misplaced. The disengaged are no less positioned to do good or dispense beneficence, no more arrogant or complicit than those glued to the headlines. Nonetheless, I contend that citizens do have moral reason to remain informed – they ought not be indifferent to others. This, I show, provides a standing reason to pay attention to distant strangers: by bearing witness, we avoid i…Read more
  •  72
    Reciprocity Without Compliance
    Philosophy and Public Affairs 48 (4): 382-421. 2020.
    Philosophy & Public Affairs, EarlyView.