• Evaluative Uncertainty and Permissible Preference
    Philosophical Review 134 (1): 35-64. 2025.
    There has recently been an explosion of interest in rational and moral choice under evaluative uncertainty—uncertainty about values or reasons. However, the dominant views on such choice have at least three major problems: they are overly demanding, they are incompatible with supererogation, and they cannot be applied to agents with credence in indeterminate evaluative theories. The authors propose a unified view that solves all these problems. According to this view, permissible options maximiz…Read more
  • Meaningfulness and Time
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 84 (2): 345-377. 2011.
    (Pdf updated to final, slightly revised version of November 2010) Almost everyone would prefer to lead a meaningful life. But what is meaning in life and what makes a life meaningful? I argue, first, for a new analysis of the concept of meaningfulness in terms of the appropriateness of feelings of fulfilment and admiration. Second, I argue that while the best current conceptions of meaningfulness, such as Susan Wolf’s view that in a meaningful life ‘subjective attraction meets objective attracti…Read more
  • Is the Universe Indifferent? Should We Care?
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 104 (3): 676-695. 2021.
    The scientific worldview is often claimed to reveal a universe chillingly indifferent to human suffering. But it’s unclear what it means to describe the universe as indifferent, or what a non- indifferent universe would be like. I suggest that the relevant contrast isn’t simply that between God and His absence, nor is the complaint about indifference focused on the lack of a kind of cosmic concern. At its heart is the idea of a mismatch between world and value. Although the causal forces governi…Read more
  • Dogmatism and Inquiry
    Mind 133 (531): 651-676. 2024.
    Inquiry aims at knowledge. Your inquiry into a question succeeds just in case you come to know the answer. However, combined with a common picture on which misleading evidence can lead knowledge to be lost, this view threatens to recommend a novel form of dogmatism. At least in some cases, individuals who know the answer to a question appear required to avoid evidence bearing on it. In this paper, we’ll aim to do two things. First, we’ll present an argument for this novel form of dogmatism and s…Read more
  • Consider the skeptic about the external world. Let’s straightaway concede to such a skeptic that perception gives us no conclusive or certain knowledge about our surroundings. Our perceptual justification for beliefs about our surroundings is always defeasible—there are always possible improvements in our epistemic state which would no longer support those beliefs. Let’s also concede to the skeptic that it’s metaphysically possible for us to have all the experiences we’re now having while all th…Read more
  • An Essay on Free Will by Peter van Inwagen (review)
    Journal of Philosophy 82 (6): 327-330. 1985.
  • The future of philosophy
    Robert E. Dewey
    Journal of Philosophy 53 (5): 187-196. 1956.
  • The future of philosophy as a university study
    William Adams Brown
    Journal of Philosophy 18 (25): 673-682. 1921.
  • Is conceivability a guide to possibility?
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 53 (1): 1-42. 1993.
  • Free Will Agnosticism
    Noûs 47 (2): 235-252. 2013.
    I argue that no one knows whether there is free will.
  • Death
    Noûs 4 (1): 73-80. 1970.
  • Games and the art of agency
    Philosophical Review 128 (4): 423-462. 2019.
    Games may seem like a waste of time, where we struggle under artificial rules for arbitrary goals. The author suggests that the rules and goals of games are not arbitrary at all. They are a way of specifying particular modes of agency. This is what make games a distinctive art form. Game designers designate goals and abilities for the player; they shape the agential skeleton which the player will inhabit during the game. Game designers work in the medium of agency. Game-playing, then, illuminate…Read more
  • The impossibility of rational egoism
    David Gauthier
    Journal of Philosophy 71 (14): 439-456. 1974.
  • On Denoting
    Bertrand Russell
    Mind 14 (56): 479-493. 1905.
    By a `denoting phrase' I mean a phrase such as any one of the following: a man, some man, any man, every man, all men, the present King of England, the present King of France, the center of mass of the solar system at the first instant of the twentieth century, the revolution of the earth round the sun, the revolution of the sun round the earth. Thus a phrase is denoting solely in virtue of its form. We may distinguish three cases: (1) A phrase may be denoting, and yet not denote anything; e.g.,…Read more
  • Teleological explanations of human actions are explanations in terms of aims, goals, or purposes of human agents. According to a familiar causal approach to analyzing and explaining human action, our actions are, essentially, events (and sometimes states, perhaps) that are suitably caused by appropriate mental items, or neural realizations of those items. Causalists traditionally appeal, in part, to such goal-representing states as desires and intentions (or their neural realizers) in their expl…Read more
  • Perceptual entitlement
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 67 (3): 503-48. 2003.
    The paper develops a conception of epistemic warrant as applied to perceptual belief, called "entitlement", that does not require the warranted individual to be capable of understanding the warrant. The conception is situated within an account of animal perception and unsophisticated perceptual belief. It characterizes entitlement as fulfillment of an epistemic norm that is apriori associated with a certain representational function that can be known apriori to be a function of perception. The p…Read more
  • I. Knowledge of Other Minds
    Norman Malcolm
    Journal of Philosophy 55 (23): 969. 1958.
  • Personal identity
    Philosophical Review 80 (1): 3-27. 1971.
  • Memory and persons
    Philosophical Review 112 (3): 289-337. 2003.
    I want to reflect on some functions of memory and their relations to traditional issues about personal identity. I try to elicit ways in which having memory, with its presupposition of agent identity over time, is integral to being a person, indeed to having a representational mind.
  • What is it like to be a bat?
    Philosophical Review 83 (4): 435-50. 1974.
  • Center indifference and skepticism
    Noûs 58 (3): 778-798. 2024.
    Many philosophers have been attracted to a restricted version of the principle of indifference in the case of self‐locating belief. Roughly speaking, this principle states that, within any given possible world, one should be indifferent between different hypotheses concerning who one is within that possible world, so long as those hypotheses are compatible with one's evidence. My first goal is to defend a more precise version of this principle. After responding to several existing criticisms of …Read more
  • Existence Is Evidence of Immortality
    Noûs 55 (1): 128-151. 2021.
    Time may be infinite in both directions. If it is, then, if persons could live at most once in all of time, the probability that you would be alive now would be zero. But if persons can live more than once, the probability that you would be alive now would be nonzero. Since you are alive now, with certainty, either the past is finite, or persons can live more than once.
  • Pragmatic Skepticism
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 104 (2): 434-453. 2021.
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, Volume 104, Issue 2, Page 434-453, March 2022.
  • Primitive Normativity and Skepticism about Rules
    Journal of Philosophy 108 (5): 227-254. 2011.
  • Radical Externalism
    Philosophical Review 129 (3): 395-431. 2020.
    This article presents a novel challenge to epistemic internalism. The challenge rests on a set of cases which feature subjects forming beliefs under conditions of “bad ideology”—that is, conditions in which pervasively false beliefs have the function of sustaining, and are sustained by, systems of social oppression. In such cases, the article suggests, the externalistic view that justification is in part a matter of worldly relations, rather than the internalistic view that justification is sole…Read more
  • Practical Knowledge without Luminosity
    Mind 131 (523): 917-934. 2021.
    According to a rich tradition in philosophy of action, intentional action requires practical knowledge: someone who acts intentionally knows what they are doing while they are doing it. Piñeros Glasscock argues that an anti-luminosity argument, of the sort developed in Williamson, can be readily adapted to provide a reductio of an epistemic condition on intentional action. This paper undertakes a rescue mission on behalf of an epistemic condition on intentional action. We formulate and defend a …Read more
  • Ethical absolutism and the ideal observer
    Roderick Firth
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 12 (3): 317-345. 1951.
    The moral philosophy of the first half of the twentieth century, at least in the English-speaking part of the world, has been largely devoted to problems of an ontological or epistemological nature. This concentration of effort by many acute analytical minds has not produced any general agreement with respect to the solution of these problems; it seems likely, on the contrary, that the wealth of proposed solutions, each making some claim to plausibility, has resulted in greater disagreement than…Read more
  • Justice as fairness
    John Rawls
    Philosophical Review 67 (2): 164-194. 1958.
  • Morality as a system of hypothetical imperatives
    Philippa Foot
    Philosophical Review 81 (3): 305-316. 1972.