Oxford
Department Of Philosophy
Alumnus
Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America
  •  22
    On Sarah McGrath's Moral Knowledge
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 107 (2): 545-552. 2023.
  •  27
    This commentary on Elinor Mason’s _Ways to be Blameworthy_ considers Mason’s proposed reflexivity constraint on ordinary blame- and praiseworthy action. I argue that the reflexivity constraint leaves too many intuitively apt targets of praise and blame out of the reach of those attitudes, and the availability of their detached counterparts does not make up for this. I also suggest that Mason’s case for the constraint is open to question. This gives us reasons to prefer a moral concern account of…Read more
  • Humanity as an end in itself
    In Karen Jones & François Schroeter (eds.), The Many Moral Rationalisms, Oxford Univerisity Press. 2018.
  •  438
    Kantian constructivism
    In Ruth Chang & Kurt Sylvan (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Practical Reason, . 2021.
    Theories of reasons and other normativia can seem to lead ineluctably to a tragic dilemma. They can be personal but parochial if they locate reasons in features of the point of view of actual people. Or they can be objective but alien if they take reasons to be mind-independent fixtures of the universe. Kantian constructivism tries to offer the best of both worlds: an account of normative authority anchored in the evaluative perspectives of actual agents but refined by a procedure that guarantee…Read more
  •  32
    Normativity from Rationality: A Comment on John Broome
    Australasian Philosophical Review 4 (4): 343-352. 2020.
    ABSTRACT The target of John Broome’s critique is a certain kind of reductive project: that of reducing the property of rationality to that of normativity, or the property of being rational to that of being as we ought or have conclusive reason to be. Broome argues that this reductive project fails, because the identity claim on which it rests is false. Rationality, he argues, supervenes on the mind: two people who are mental duplicates are necessarily also rational duplicates. But normativity, o…Read more
  • Why be An Internalist about Reasons?
    In Russ Shafer-Landau (ed.), Oxford Studies in Metaethics, Volume 6, Oxford University Press. 2011.
  •  136
    Moral Reason
    Oxford University Press. 2014.
    Julia Markovits develops a desire-based, internalist account of what normative reasons are--an account which is compatible with the idea that moral reasons can apply to all of us, regardless of our desires. She builds on Kant's formula of humanity to defend universal moral reasons, and addresses the age-old question of why we should be moral.
  •  149
  •  77
    Précis of Moral Reason
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 92 (2): 518-530. 2016.
  •  745
    Acting for the right reasons
    Philosophical Review 119 (2): 201-242. 2010.
    This essay examines the thought that our right actions have moral worth only if we perform them for the right reasons. It argues against the view, often ascribed to Kant, that morally worthy actions must be performed because they are right and argues that Kantians and others ought instead to accept the view that morally worthy actions are those performed for the reasons why they are right. In other words, morally worthy actions are those for which the reasons why they were performed (the reasons…Read more
  •  44
    Reply to Sobel and Kearns
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 92 (2): 549-559. 2016.
  •  6
    Internal reasons and the motivating intuition
    In Michael Brady (ed.), New Waves in Metaethics, Palgrave-macmillan. 2010.
  •  392
    Saints, heroes, sages, and villains
    Philosophical Studies 158 (2): 289-311. 2012.
    This essay explores the question of how to be good. My starting point is a thesis about moral worth that I’ve defended in the past: roughly, that an action is morally worthy if and only it is performed for the reasons why it is right. While I think that account gets at one important sense of moral goodness, I argue here that it fails to capture several ways of being worthy of admiration on moral grounds. Moral goodness is more multi-faceted. My title is intended to capture that multi-facetedness…Read more