• Perspectives in Metaphysics is a uniquely inclusive introduction to metaphysics co-authored by 14 leading and emerging scholars in the field. It covers traditional metaphysical problems like personal identity, free will, and time alongside neglected topics such as the metaphysics of gender, social construction, and non-Western metaphysics. Students using this text will encounter metaphysics as an engaging field of study that is practically relevant to their daily lives.
  • Ordinary objects
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2025.
    An encyclopedia entry which covers various revisionary conceptions of which macroscopic objects there are, and the puzzles and arguments that motivate these conceptions: sorites arguments, the argument from vagueness, the puzzles of material constitution, arguments against indeterminate identity, arguments from arbitrariness, debunking arguments, the overdetermination argument, and the problem of the many.
  • Grounding and the Myth of Ontological Innocence
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 99 (2): 303-318. 2021.
    According to the Ontological Innocence Thesis (OIT), grounded entities are ontologically innocent relative to their full grounds. I argue that OIT entails a contradiction, and therefore must be discarded. My argument turns on the notion of “groundmates,” two or more numerically distinct entities that share at least one of their full grounds. I argue that, if OIT is true, then it is both the case that there are groundmates and that there are no groundmates. Therefore, so I conclude, OIT is false.…Read more
  • Debunking Arguments and Metaphysical Laws
    Philosophical Studies 177 (7): 1829-1855. 2020.
    I argue that one’s views about which “metaphysical laws” obtain—including laws about what is identical with what, about what is reducible to what, and about what grounds what—can be used to deflect or neutralize the threat posed by a debunking explanation. I use a well-known debunking argument in the metaphysics of material objects as a case study. Then, after defending the proposed strategy from the charge of question-begging, I close by showing how the proposed strategy can be used by certain …Read more