•  41
    Compared with children, adults are widely assumed to possess more mature moral understanding thus justifying deference to their moral authority and testimony. This paper examines philosophical discussions regarding this child-adult moral relation and its implications for moral education, particularly accounts suggesting that the moral status of children constitute grounds for treating them paternalistically. I contend that descriptions and justifications of this paternalistic attitude towards ch…Read more
  •  11
    On Learning, Playfulness, and Becoming Human
    Philosophy 93 (1): 3-29. 2018.
    This essay aims to develop the so-called ‘transformational view’ of human development (advocated by McDowell and Bakhurst) by advancing a play-based model of learning. I first consider challenges to this view posed by Luntley and Rödl who argue that the learning encounter must presuppose some rational faculty already present in the prelinguistic child. Rödl in particular considers joint attentional episodes in which child and adult attend to objects in their environment together as signifying a …Read more
  • Learning as a Child in Gopnik’s The Philosophical Baby
    Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture 21 (3): 82-96. 2017.
  • Skillful Disposition and Responsiveness in Mental Imagery
    Avant: Trends in Interdisciplinary Studies 2019 (2): 1-17. 2019.
    This paper aims to explore and expand on Wittgenstein’s remarks on the nature of mental imagery. Despite some rather cryptic passages and obvious objections, his notion of mental imagery as possessing a constitutive (and not merely added) element of expressive thought and conceptuality offers critical insights linking perceptual capacities with our shared practices. In particular I seek to further develop Wittgenstein’s claim that perceptual impressions presuppose a “mastery of a technique.” I a…Read more