•  112
    Catharine Macaulay on Cultivating our Sympathetic Potential
    Journal of Modern Philosophy 7. 2025.
    Catharine Macaulay (1731 — 1791) is often construed as a historian, and moral and political philosopher chiefly concerned with the high privilege of reason. Accordingly, her Letters on Education (1790) are thought to advance her vision for how education must cultivate the rational capacities required to comprehend moral duty. In this paper, against scholarly consensus, I show that sympathy, not reason, makes possible the discovery of moral truths and inclines us to act in accordance with them. B…Read more
  •  159
    Common Sense and Skepticism: Reid and Buffier
    In Anik Waldow, Dario Perinetti & Sandrine Roux (eds.), Claude Buffier: Common Sense, Metaphysics, and Sociability, Oxford University Press. 2026.
    Common sense philosophy often resolves the threat of skepticism by appeal to epistemic realism. Reidian common sense, for instance, establishes that perception allows us to form a veridical conception of external objects from information delivered by the senses. Based on an eighteenth-century English translation of his work, some scholars have assumed that Buffier similarly relies upon common sense to defend epistemic realism. Through a comparative analysis of Reid and Buffier, this chapter show…Read more
  •  135
    Frances Power Cobbe: Essential Writings of a Nineteenth-Century Feminist Philosopher (review)
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 31 (3): 568-572. 2022.
    Frances Power Cobbe (1822-1904) was well-known during her lifetime: she corresponded with and criticized the work of figures we are familiar with today (most notably Charles Darwin, John Stuart Mil...
  •  304
    The developmental potential of the human mind: Hume on children and the formation of fiction
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 31 (1): 58-78. 2023.
    Fictions feature prominently in several of Hume’s important arguments about the external world. For example, Hume is clear that there would be no belief in the continued existence of objects, were it not for the fictions that are causally responsible for effecting this belief. Interpreters of Hume on the topic of fiction generally argue that the formation of fiction requires the possession of general ideas and the use of language. Drawing upon recent attempts in the literature to advance this cl…Read more