•  185
    On the Singularity of the Categorical Imperative
    Southwest Philosophy Review 39 (1): 165-173. 2023.
    Kant famously claims that there is only a single supreme principle of morality: the Categorical Imperative. This claim is often treated with skepticism. After all, Kant proceeds to provide no fewer than six formulations of this purportedly single supreme principle—formulations which appear to differ significantly. But appearances can be deceptive. In this paper, I argue that Kant was right. There is only a single Categorical Imperative, and each of its formulations expresses the very same moral …Read more
  •  336
    Deriving Positive Duties from Kant's Formula of Universal Law
    History of Philosophy Quarterly 40 (3): 191-201. 2023.
    According to the objection from positive duties, Kant's Formula of Universal Law is flawed because it cannot be used to derive any affirmative moral requirements. This paper offers a response to that objection and proposes a novel way to derive positive duties from Kant's formula. The Formula of Universal Law yields positive duties to adopt our own perfection and others’ happiness as ends because we could not rationally fail to will those ends as universal ends.
  •  27
    An Interpretation and Defense of the Supreme Principle of Morality
    Dissertation, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. 2023.
    According to Kant, the supreme principle of morality is: “act only according to that maxim through which you can at the same time will that it become a universal law” (G 4:421). This principle has come to be known as the Formula of Universal Law (“FUL”). Few philosophers believe it succeeds. But, I argue, few philosophers have understood what FUL means. This dissertation offers a full defense of FUL. It is, in fact, the supreme principle of morality—and it can successfully derive a viable theory…Read more
  •  185
    In this chapter aimed at undergraduate philosophy students, I provide a brief and simple introduction to Kant's transcendental idealism and explain the argument of his First Antinomy.
  •  41
    How Can Punishment be Justified? On Kant's Retributivism
    In Heather Wilburn (ed.), Philosophical Thought: Across Cultures and Through the Ages, . 2022.
    In this brief chapter aimed at undergraduates, I examine theories of punishment and provide an introduction to Kant's retributivism.
  •  261
    Judicial Incoherence, Capital Punishment, and the Legalization of Torture
    Georgetown Law Journal Online 108 (74). 2019.
    This brief essay responds to the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Bucklew v. Precythe. It contends that the argument relied upon by the Court in that decision, as well as in Glossip v. Gross, is either trivial or demonstrably invalid. Hence, this essay provides a nonmoral reason to oppose the Court’s recent capital punishment decisions. The Court’s position that petitioners seeking to challenge a method of execution must identify a readily available and feasible alternative execution protocol …Read more
  •  52
    On Bayne and Chalmers’ Phenomenal Unity Thesis
    Philosophia 48 (3): 935-945. 2020.
    According to the Phenomenal Unity Thesis (“PUT”) – most prominently defended by Tim Bayne and David Chalmers – necessarily, any set of phenomenal states of a subject at a time is phenomenally unified. The standard formulation of this thesis is unacceptably vague because it does not specify what it is to be a subject. In this paper, I first consider possible meanings for ‘subject’ as used in PUT and argue that every plausible candidate definition renders the thesis trivially true. I consider and …Read more
  •  328
    In defence of transcendental idealism: reply to McWherter
    Journal of Critical Realism 17 (5): 514-518. 2018.
    I recently argued that critical realists ought to adopt transcendental idealism in favour of Bhaskar’s transcendental realism. In response, Dustin McWherter presents two arguments against transcendental idealism: it is inferior to transcendental realism because it cannot account for the epistemic significance of experimentation, and it is internally inconsistent because it affirms the existence of things-in-themselves. This brief reply defends transcendental idealism against both objections.
  •  688
    Why critical realists ought to be transcendental idealists
    Journal of Critical Realism 17 (3): 297-307. 2018.
    In A Realist Theory of Science, Roy Bhaskar provides several transcendental arguments for critical realism – a position Bhaskar himself characterized as transcendental realism. Bhaskar provides an argument from perception and from the intelligibility of scientific experimentation, maintaining that transcendental realism is necessary for both. I argue that neither argument succeeds, and that transcendental idealism can better vindicate scientific practice than Bhaskar’s realism. Bhaskar’s argumen…Read more