Baylor University
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2020
Waco, Texas, United States of America
  •  15
    In this article I argue for an Aristotelian hylomorphic view of bodily parthood on which parthood turns on functionality: something is part of a human being’s body just in case it functions in the right way for the sake of that person; that is, its functioning aims at the flourishing of the particular human’s biological life. Thus, perhaps counterintuitively, some things can stand in the body part relation without being composed of human cells—say, transplanted non-human organs or prosthetic app…Read more
  •  22
    Privation in the Problem of Evil
    In Lara Buchak, Dean W. Zimmerman & Philip Swenson (eds.), Oxford Studies in Philosophy of Religion Volume 9, Oxford University Press. pp. 1-17. 2019.
    Privative evils are evils that deprive someone of a due good. Chapter 1 considers a special but widespread type of a privative evil, namely impairment. It argues that even though an impairment may deprive someone of a significant and due good, impairments as such do not make for a significant case against theism. The argument is based on thought experiments suggesting that it does not make one significantly worse off when one is lacking a _due_ good as opposed to when one is merely lacking a goo…Read more
  •  138
  •  81
    Is that my heart? A hylomorphic account of bodily parthood
    Dissertation, Baylor University. 2020.
    This dissertation investigates the metaphysics of human body parts; particularly, the epistemic conditions under which something can be said to be a “body part of” some particular human being. In this dissertation I draw on the hylomorphism of Aristotle and John Duns Scotus to argue that a necessary and sufficient condition on human bodily parthood is an object’s functioning for the sake of the whole human being and the maintenance of her biological life. I argue that, on this view of bodily par…Read more
  •  70
    Frontiers of Analogous Justice
    Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 91 201-210. 2017.
    In this paper I argue for a Thomistic alternative to Martha Nussbaum’s justice for animals as outlined in Frontiers of Justice. I argue that an account of analogous justice between humans and animals can generate real and robust obligations towards animals. I first show how Aquinas’s treatment of nonhuman animals in the questions on law evince a wider, shared community between humans and animals by which we see animals and humans as equally under divine providence. I then argue that while Aquina…Read more
  •  129
    Disability and First-Person Testimony
    Southwest Philosophy Review 34 (1): 141-151. 2018.
    It is widely agreed that first-person testimony is a good source of evidence, including testimony about the contents of mental states unobservable to others. Thus we generally think that an individual’s testimony is a good source of evidence about her wellbeing—after all, she experiences her quality of life and we don’t. However, some have argued that the first-person testimony of disabled individuals regarding their wellbeing is defeated: regardless of someone’s claim about how disability affec…Read more