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262Guilty Pleas and Illocutionary InjusticeSocial Philosophy Today 41 175-178. 2025.This short critical commentary responds to Jennifer Lackey's book Criminal Testimonial Injustice, arguing contra Lackey that guilty pleas under our criminal legal system need not be infelicitous due to being coerced. Rather, coerced guilty pleas can serve as extracted speech, unjustly rendering the speaker actively complicit in their own punishment. While this assessment contradicts Lackey's judgment, it supports her overall argument that the criminal legal system exploits the agency of the accu…Read more
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1175Brazen DogwhistlesApa Studies on Feminism and Philosophy 25 (1): 18-25. 2025.A dogwhistle, in its most centrally-discussed sense, seeks to obscure part of its meaning from part of its audience. Yet, as many have noted, dogwhistles that are flaunted at an opposing group play a prominent role in political speech. I call these speech acts 'brazen dogwhistles'. This paper deals first with theoretical concerns, exploring the features of brazen dogwhistles, arguing that we have good reasons to consider them to be dogwhistles, and making room for them in a broadly Saul-style ac…Read more
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1716AI Romance and Misogyny: A Speech Act AnalysisIn Henry Shevlin (ed.), Oxford Intersections: AI in Society, Oxford University Press. 2025.Through the lens of feminist speech act theory, this paper argues that artificial intelligence romance systems objectify and subordinate nonvirtual women. AI romance systems treat their users as consumers, offering them relational invulnerability and control over their (usually feminized) digital romantic partner. This paper argues that, though the output of AI chatbots may not generally constitute speech, the framework offered by an AI romance system communicates an unjust perspective on intima…Read more
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874ChatGPT and Emotional OutsourcingThe Prindle Post. 2023.It might seem wrong to use LLMs (a kind of generative AI) for personal writing such as a love letter or apology. This paper considers why. I argue that the problem, if any, is not the lack of a human author. Rather, using LLMs for this kind of writing involves what I call emotional outsourcing, which is sometimes morally or otherwise objectionable.
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947Defending truth values for indicative conditionalsPhilosophical Studies 177 (6): 1635-1657. 2020.There is strong disagreement about whether indicative conditionals have truth values. In this paper, I present a new argument for the conclusion that indicative conditionals have truth values based on the claim that some true statements entail indicative conditionals. I then address four arguments that conclude that indicative conditionals lack truth values, showing them to be inadequate. Finally, I present further benefits to having a worldly view of conditionals, which supports the assignment …Read more
Areas of Specialization
| Philosophy of Language |
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Language |
| Philosophy of Religion |
| Metaphysics |