•  28
    Internal Reasons and Agent‐Neutrality
    Analytic Philosophy. forthcoming.
    The first aim of this paper is to argue that Bernard Williams's argument against external reasons is best understood as a rejection of Thomas Nagel's (apparently tangential) notion of a universal agent‐neutral reason for anyone and everyone to promote/desire the occurrence of the event to which the reason applies. To the extent that the reconstruction of this dialectic highlights an inconsistency in Nagel's position—Nagel cannot maintain the truth of his neo‐Kantian cognitive internalism while d…Read more
  •  107
    Hybrid Ethical Theory and Cohen’s Critique of Rawls’s Egalitarian Liberalism
    Moral Philosophy and Politics 11 (2): 227-251. 2024.
    This article examines G. A. Cohen’s endorsement of a hybrid ethical theory and its relationship to his critique of John Rawls’s egalitarian liberalism. Cohen claimed that Rawls’s appeal to special incentives was a distortion of his own difference principle. I argue that Cohen’s acceptance of a personal prerogative (the central element of Samuel Scheffler’s version of a hybrid ethical theory) has several untoward consequences. First, it illuminates how any reasonable challenge to Rawls’s liberali…Read more
  •  519
    Agent-Relativity and the Status of Deontological Restrictions
    Journal of Value Inquiry 57 (2): 233-255. 2021.
    There is a well-established project in moral philosophy which seeks to demarcate deontological normative theories from consequentialist normative theories by defining deontology and deontological restrictions exclusively in terms of their agent-relativity. My aim in this paper is to explain why this project is mistaken and to defend both the possibility and the plausibility of agent-neutral deontological restrictions. I will argue that the common rationale underwriting the alleged agent-relativi…Read more
  •  109
    I have two aims in this article. The first is to break the deadlocked exchange between John Skorupski and John Broome concerning how best to understand Thomas Nagel's distinction between agent-neutral and agent-relative reasons for action. The second is to provide a reformulation of the distinction which captures an uncontroversial distinction between those reason-giving considerations which encapsulate an indexical relationship between an agent and an object of moral concern, and those which do…Read more
  •  145
    This paper offers a defence of the distinction between agent-neutral and agent-relative reasons for action from scepticism aired by Toni Rønnow-Rasmussen. In response it is argued that the Nagelian notion of an agent-neutral reason is not incomprehensible, and that agent-neutral reasons can indeed be understood as obtaining states of affairs that count in favour of anyone and everyone performing the action they favour. Furthermore, I argue that a distinction drawn between agent-neutral and agent…Read more