•  5
    You Had to Be a Weapon, Ender … We Aimed You
    In Kevin S. Decker (ed.), Ender's Game and Philosophy, Wiley. 2013-08-26.
    At the climax of Ender's Game, we see Ender exhausted and at wit's end. Sorting out the mess of who is actually responsible for what is difficult–we feel conflicted about the whole thing, just as Ender does. In this chapter, Aristotle helps us make sense of responsibility and voluntary action and considers whether a person can be responsible for something that he or she did not cause. It looks at why we should care about whether a fictional character is responsible and consider an alternative no…Read more
  •  11
    The limits of moral dumbfounding
    Mind and Language 36 (4): 610-626. 2021.
    In moral psychology, “psychological rationalism” is the view that moral judgments are caused by a process of reasoning. Jonathan Haidt argues against this view by showing that people succumb to “moral dumbfounding”—they cannot adequately provide reasoning for their moral judgment. I argue that this evidence undermines psychological rationalism only if the view is committed to two claims about reasoning: (a) reasoning must meet an adequacy condition, and (b) reasoning must be sufficiently conscio…Read more