•  827
    Blameworthy Required Acts and Deontic Status Tracing
    Ethics 136 (2): 354-383. 2026.
    In certain cases – Alone/Together Dilemmas, Single-Agent Dilemmas, and Actualist “Professor Procrastinate” Cases – an agent is required to perform incompatible actions, such that performing some act required of her is a way of failing to perform another act which is also required of her. The act she performs is thereby wrong – even as it is required. According to my theory, Deontic Status Tracing, whether an agent is blameworthy for such an act depends on what explains its bizarre deontic status…Read more
  •  937
    What Are We to Do? Making Sense of 'Joint Ought' Talk
    Philosophical Studies 182 (3): 705-724. 2025.
    We argue for three main claims. First, the sentence ‘A and B ought to φ and ψ’ can express what we a call a joint-ought claim: the claim that the plurality A and B ought to φ and ψ respectively. Second, the truth-value of this joint-ought claim can differ from the truth-value of the pair of claims ‘A ought to φ’ and ‘B ought to ψ.’ This is because what A and B jointly ought to do can diverge from what they individually ought to do: it may be true that A and B jointly ought to φ and ψ respectivel…Read more
  •  1690
    Hypocrisy as Two-Faced
    Oxford Studies in Normative Ethics 14 93-116. 2024.
    This paper argues that there is a distinctive vice of hypocrisy, which is Janus-faced. The vice of hypocrisy is the self-excepting avoidance of a particular pain, namely, the pain associated with being an object of blame one believes deserved. One can self-exceptingly avoid this pain attitudinally or behaviorally. With “attitudinal” hypocrisy, a person avoids it at the level of her beliefs: she avoids forming the belief that she is blameworthy for some act, while blaming others for their compara…Read more
  •  1361
    Why Plan-Expressivists Can't Pick Up the Moral Slack
    Oxford Studies in Metaethics 19. 2024.
    This paper raises two problems for plan-expressivism concerning normative judgments about non-corealizable actions: actions which cannot both be performed. First, plan-expressivists associate normative judgment with an attitude which satisfies a corealizability constraint, but this constraint is (in the interpersonal case) unwarranted, and (in the intrapersonal case) warranted only at the price of a contentious normative premise. Ayars (2022) holds that the pair of judgments ‘A should φ’ and ‘B …Read more