• Leveraging a Sturdy Norm: How Ethicists Really Argue
    Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 1-11. forthcoming.
    Rarely do everyday discussions of ethical issues invoke ethical theories. Even ethicists deploy ethical theories less frequently than one might expect. In my experience, the most powerful ethical arguments rarely appeal to an ethical theory. How is this possible? I contend that ethical argumentation can proceed successfully without invoking any ethical theory because the structure of good ethical argumentation involves leveraging a sturdy norm, where the norm is usually far more specific than a …Read more
  • A Puzzle about Disability and Old Age
    Journal of Applied Philosophy 39 (1): 103-116. 2021.
    Journal of Applied Philosophy, EarlyView.