•  467
    No Guarantee: Coherence, Rationality, and Fragmentation
    Thought: A Journal of Philosophy. forthcoming.
    According to anti-structuralists about rationality, such as Errol Lord and Benjamin Kiesewetter, incoherence is irrational because it guarantees a failure to respond to one's possessed reasons. For example, since having sufficient evidence for believing p entails not having sufficient evidence for believing not-p, it must be unreasonable to hold both beliefs. I argue that one of the most compelling explanations of how incoherence is psychologically possible, the fragmentation hypothesis, undermi…Read more
  •  924
    Taught rules: Instruction and the evolution of norms
    Philosophical Studies 181 (2): 433-459. 2024.
    Why do we have social norms—of fairness, cooperation, trust, property, or gender? Modern-day Humeans, as I call them, believe these norms are best accounted for in cultural evolutionary terms, as adaptive solutions to recurrent problems of social interaction. In this paper, I discuss a challenge to this “Humean Program.” Social norms involve widespread behaviors, but also distinctive psychological attitudes and dispositions. According to the challenge, Humean accounts of norms leave their psycho…Read more
  •  1458
    Coherence as Joint Satisfiability
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 102 (2): 312-332. 2024.
    According to many philosophers, rationality is, at least in part, a matter of one’s attitudes cohering with one another. Theorists who endorse this idea have devoted much attention to formulating various coherence requirements. Surprisingly, they have said very little about what it takes for a set of attitudes to be coherent in general. We articulate and defend a general account on which a set of attitudes is coherent just in case and because it is logically possible for the attitudes to be join…Read more