•  22
    Intellectual Charisma
    Philosophers' Imprint 23 (n/a). 2023.
    I present an account of an aspect of people’s intellectual characters that has yet to receive such direct treatment in the literature on the intellectual virtues. That aspect is our capacity to influence others in ways that make inquiry go more successfully, which I call “intellectual charisma”. In presenting this account, I first draw on work in empirical psychology to build a partial picture of intellectual charisma as a social-psychological phenomenon. I then draw on this partial picture in d…Read more
  •  21
    Realism and Conventionalism in Later Mohist Semantics
    Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 16 (4): 521-542. 2017.
    In this essay, I argue in favor of a novel interpretation of the semantic theory that can be found in the Later Mohist writings. Recent interpretations by Chad Hansen and Chris Fraser cast the Later Mohist theory as a realist theory; this includes attributing to the Later Mohists what we can call “kind-realism,” the idea that there is some correct scheme of kind-terms that carves the world at its joints. While I agree with Hansen and Fraser that the Later Mohist theory is realist in various ways…Read more
  •  78
    Confucianism, pragmatism, and socially beneficial philosophy
    Journal of Chinese Philosophy 36 (1): 53-67. 2009.
    No Abstract
  •  24
    Later Mohist ethics and philosophical progress in ancient China
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 29 (3): 394-414. 2021.
    The writings of the later Mohists are generally taken to contain several updates to the consequentialist ethical view held by the Mohist school. In this paper, I defend one interpretation of those updates and how they may have served, within the Mohists’ argumentative context, to make their views more defensible. I argue that we should reject A.C. Graham’s prominent interpretation, on which the later Mohists’ argumentative strategy is to develop a conception of the a priori and to ground their e…Read more
  •  25
    Confucian Ethics and The Practical Value of Roles
    Philosophy East and West 68 (3): 909-928. 2018.
    One recent trend in Western philosophical ethics has been a push toward ethical naturalism, and with it, psychological realism.1 One part of such psychological realism involves the attempt to recast the ethical project in light of our recent acceptance that the sources of human behavior are complex and multifarious, that we are not, as it were, autonomous rational agents who can comply with our moral norms simply by choosing to do so. This keener empirical understanding of the sources of human b…Read more