•  148
    Skepticism and Ontological Parsimony
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 107 (2): 86-98. 2026.
    External world skepticism is often thought to entail that we should suspend judgment about the existence of the external world. I challenge this orthodoxy by arguing that, when combined with a plausible principle of ontological parsimony, the skeptical challenge intensifies into an argument for outright disbelief in the external world. The principle in question instructs us to prima facie disbelieve in undetectable postulates. This bears on the skeptical challenge because, by the skeptic’s light…Read more
  •  237
    Individuating Artificial Minds
    Erkenntnis. forthcoming.
    This paper argues that if an artificial system realizes consciousness, then it’s likely to realize not just one, but many independent minds at once. This view is motivated by analogy to split-brain cases, in which the two hemispheres of a patient’s brain are functionally disconnected. While there are several ways to interpret this phenomenon, it’s highly plausible that split-brain patients have two distinct minds—one per hemisphere. If functional disconnection within a single biological brain ca…Read more
  •  260
    Parsimony and Overfitting
    Philosophy of Science. forthcoming.
    Philosophers often defend appeals to parsimony by invoking its central role in science. I argue that this move fails once we distinguish between two uses of parsimony: non-ideal and ideal. Non-ideal parsimony enjoys strong inductive support in science, since complex models are prone to overfit to predictively irrelevant noise. But philosophical data aren’t significantly noisy in the relevant sense: when our intuitions are unreliable, their unreliability typically reflects systematic bias rather …Read more
  •  468
    Brute Fact Parsimony
    Philosophical Studies. forthcoming.
    This paper argues that two of the theoretical virtues—ontological and ideological parsimony—reduce to a more foundational and familiar theoretical imperative to avoid positing brute facts. Following recent developments in metaphysics, I characterize ontological and ideological parsimony as principles that impose theoretical costs on fundamental ontology and primitive ideology respectively. I subsequently argue that both sorts of theoretical commitment entail costly brute (i.e., ungrounded) commi…Read more
  •  480
    The Right to Restrict AI Training
    Philosophy and Technology 39. 2026.
    Generative AI systems require vast amounts of training data, much of it scraped from the internet without creators’ consent. Critics often characterize this practice as “theft,” but such claims require showing that AI training violates creators’ property rights. However, this position risks implying that human learning and works of inspiration would count as theft, too. This paper develops two arguments for moral restrictions that apply uniquely to AI training, not to human learning. The first c…Read more
  •  476
    Conceptual misinformation
    Synthese 206 (4): 1-19. 2025.
    Misinformation is paradigmatically false. However, a great deal of contemporary political content misleads by invoking defective concepts, even when the content is true. This paper offers an account of conceptual misinformation, according to which the use of a concept constitutes misinformation when that concept both fails to adequately capture the world’s structure and receives uptake. Central to my account is the metaphysical notion of “joint-carving” concepts—those that capture the world’s st…Read more