Bridgeport, Connecticut, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Asian Philosophy
Ethics
  •  89
    In this article I argue against Chad Hansen’s version of the “White Horse Dialogue” (Baimalun) of Gongsun Longzi as intelligible through writings of the later Moists. Hansen regards the Baimalun as an attempt to demonstrate how the compound baima, “white horse,” is correctly analyzed in one of the Moist ways of analyzing compound term semantics but not the other. I present an alternative reading in which the Baimalun arguments point out, via reductio, the failure of either Moist analysis; in par…Read more
  •  86
    In this paper, I reveal systematic aspects of the moral epistemology of the Warring States Confucian, Mengzi. Mengzi thinks moral knowledge is 'internally' available to humans because it is acquired through normative dictates built into the human heart-mind. Those dictates are capable of motivating and justifying an agent's normative categorizations. Such dictates are linked to Mengzi's conception of human nature as good. I then interpret Mengzi's difficult discussion of courage and qi in Mengzi…Read more
  •  82
    Emotional control and virtue in the "mencius"
    Philosophy East and West 49 (1): 1-27. 1999.
    This essay argues against the standard reading of Mencius that the emotions are perfectible or that they require perfecting in order to render a person virtuous. Rejecting this perfectibility reading allows us to explore two interesting philosophical points: (1) we can give an account of moral virtue and moral development that is significantly different from broadly Aristotelian accounts and that provides a psychologically realistic model of the Mencian sage; and (2) this account introduces a co…Read more
  •  35
    A Good Life, an Admirable Life, or an Uncertain Life?
    Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 14 (4): 573-577. 2015.
  •  30
  •  22
    Review of Karyn L. Lai, An Introduction to Chinese Philosophy (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (3). 2009.
  •  9
    What Is the Emperor to Us?—Relationships, Obligations, and Obedience
    Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 21 (4): 611-616. 2022.
    In an award-winning essay, Shu-Shan L ee discusses scholarly commentary about obedience to the emperor, focusing on public and hidden records of protest. The thesis of Lee’s essay is that the relationship between authority and subject in imperial Confucianism was built on a conditional obligation of obedience, despite traditional accounts of it as absolute. On his account, the obligation of obedience should be conceived through the rubric of imperial Confucianism as being conditional on fulfillm…Read more
  •  8
    Review of Antonio S. Cua (ed.), Encyclopedia of Chinese Philosophy (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2003 (8). 2003.
  •  5
    Book Reviews (review)
    Journal of Chinese Philosophy 30 (3-4): 559-562. 2003.