•  96
    The Nonidentity of Human Beings and Artificial Intelligence
    Philosophia Christi 27 (1): 143-162. 2025.
    This article seeks to make an ontological distinction, of ethical and theological importance, between artificial intelligence and human beings. It will be demonstrated that humans possess phenomenal consciousness and therefore possess selves, while artificial intelligence at most satisfies a functionalist account of consciousness and therefore does not possess a self. That human consciousness is phenomenal will be argued for by examining how subjects learn and apply abstract concepts. Moreover, …Read more
  •  150
    Gilbert Harman, in a well-known thought experiment, evokes the intuition that moral value can be perceptually seen. However, Harman dismisses the intuition, contending that moral concepts and judgments are the products of agent psychology and do not map onto mind-independent objects. Robert Audi, attempting to account for moral perception himself, fails to meet Harman’s challenge since his own ontological commitments do not allow for objects that moral concepts can map onto. This paper will offe…Read more
  •  96
    The purpose of this thesis is to provide a metaphysic for moral realism and moral perception. This thesis is in two parts. The first is concerned with basic ontology. I begin in chapter 1 with an analysis of causation, demonstrating that substance theory is superior to Humeanism at accounting for our observations; thus I defend a substance ontology. In chapter 2, I address human agency, demonstrating that reasons internalism does not allow for incompatibilist freedom; hence, I affirm reasons are…Read more