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Kant's Formula of Universal Law as a Test of CausalityPhilosophical Review 132 (3): 459-90. 2023.Kant’s formula of universal law (FUL) is standardly understood as a test of the moral permissibility of an agent’s maxim: maxims which pass the test are morally neutral, and so permissible, while those which do not are morally impermissible. In contrast, I argue that the FUL tests whether a maxim is the cause or determining ground of an action at all. According to Kant’s general account of causality, nothing can be a cause of some effect unless there is a law-like relation between the putative c…Read more
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The Ambivalence of Husserl’s Early Logic: Between Austrian Semanticism and German IdealismHusserl Studies 40 (1): 45-65. 2024.Prolegomena to Pure Logic (1900) is the definitive statement of Husserl’s early logic. But what does it say that logic is? I argue that Husserl in the Prolegomena thinks logic is its own discipline, namely the “doctrine of science” (Wissenschaftslehre), but has two conflicting ideas of what that is. One idea—expressed by the book’s general argument, and which I call Husserl’s Austrian Semanticism about logic—is that the Wissenschaftslehre is the positive science explaining what science is (which…Read more
Boston University
PhD, 2019
Areas of Specialization
| Phenomenology |
| Continental Philosophy |
| Edmund Husserl |
| Jean-Paul Sartre |
| Martin Heidegger |