•  7
    Revisiting the Asymmetry Thesis
    Analytic Philosophy. forthcoming.
    Susan Wolf holds that while blameworthiness requires the ability to do otherwise, praiseworthiness does not. We first tackle the question of what the ability to do otherwise involves, highlighting its relationship with the control condition on moral responsibility. We propose a counterfactual test that would be acceptable to proponents of the rational abilities view such as Wolf. Using this counterfactual test, we argue that Wolf's asymmetry thesis is false: praiseworthy agents, just like blamew…Read more
  •  127
    Why Assertion and Practical Reasoning Must be Governed By the Same Epistemic Norm
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 94 (1): 57-68. 2013.
    I argue that assertion and practical reasoning must be governed by the same epistemic norm. This is because the epistemic rule governing assertion derives from the epistemic rule governing practical reasoning, together with a plausible rule regarding assertion, according to which assertion must manifest belief
  •  146
    What use is Morgan's canon?
    Philosophical Psychology 18 (4): 399-414. 2005.
    Morgan's canon can be construed as claiming that an intentional explanation of a behavior should be ruled out if there exists an explanation of this behavior in terms of 'lower' mechanisms. Unfortunately, Morgan's conception of higher and lower faculties is based on dubious evolutionary considerations. I examine alternative interpretations of the terms 'higher' and 'lower', and show that none can turn the canon into a principle that is both correct and useful in drawing the line between thinkers…Read more
  •  430
    According to the worm theory, persons are (maximal) aggregates of person-stages existing at different times. Personites, on the other hand, are non-maximal aggregates of stages that are very much like persons. Their existence appears to make instances of prudential self-sacrifice morally problematic: the personites that exist at the time of the sacrifice but not at the time of the reward seem not to receive future compensation for their sacrifice. Instances of punishment appear to give rise to a…Read more
  •  99
    Normativité et irréductibilité du mental
    Dialectica 56 (4). 2002.
    Donald Davidson holds that intentional concepts are not reducible to physical or dispositional ones. This is due, he claims, to the constitutive role of normativity in the principles that govern the application of intentional concepts. According to Davidson, the specific way in which norms of rationality and coherence are mobilised by our interpretative principles sets mental concepts off from those of the natural sciences. I agree with Davidson on the irreducibility of the mental. However, I sh…Read more
  •  200
    The role of context in contextualism
    Synthese 190 (12): 2341-2366. 2013.
    According to a view widely held by epistemic contextualists, the truth conditions of a knowledge claim depend on features of the context such as the presuppositions, interests and purposes of the conversational participants. Against this view, I defend an intentionalist account, according to which the truth conditions of a knowledge attribution are determined by the speaker’s intention. I show that an intentionalist version of contextualism has several advantages over its more widely accepted ri…Read more
  •  106
    Moral Contextualism and the Norms for Moral Conduct
    American Philosophical Quarterly 44 (1). 2007.
    None
  •  118
    Can contextualists maintain neutrality?
    Philosophers' Imprint 8 1-13. 2008.
    Abstract: Several critics of contextualism claim that this view cannot consistently maintain its advertised neutrality between skepticism and anti-skepticism. Some critics contend that contextualists are forced to side with the skeptic, since any defense of contextualism unavoidably puts in place the skeptic's high requirements for knowledge; others hold that the contextualists' claim to have knowledge of what their own view entails forces them to reject the skeptic's knowledge denial. I show th…Read more
  •  20
    Shakespeare's Coriolanus is one of the most brilliant political plays ever written. Despite its ancient Roman setting, it remains a perennially relevant study of the relationship between personality and politics. The Introduction to this new edition illuminates its relevance to Shakespeare'sown time and to later ages while also emphasizing the wide range of interpretations that are possible in performance.
  •  140
    Analiticity and Translation
    Principia: An International Journal of Epistemology 7 (1-2). 2003.
    Quine’s negative theses about meaning and analyticity are well known, but he also defends a positive account of these notions. I explain what his negative and positive views are, and argue that Quine’s positive account of meaning entails that two of his most famous doctrines, namely the claim that there are no analytic statements and the indeterminacy of translation thesis, are false. But I show that the falsity of these doctrines doesn’t affect his criticisms of traditional conceptions of meani…Read more
  •  196
    Two contextualist fallacies
    Synthese 173 (3). 2010.
    I examine the radical contextualists’ two main arguments for the semantic underdeterminacy thesis, according to which all, or almost all, English sentences lack context-independent truth conditions. I show that both arguments are fallacious. The first argument, which I call the fallacy of the many understandings , mistakenly infers that a sentence S is semantically incomplete from the fact that S can be used to mean different things in different contexts. The second argument, which I call the op…Read more
  •  61
    I consider cases in which a person’s action causes a foreseeable harm, but does so through an unforeseeable causal path. According to a common view, the person is blameless for the harm in such cases. I argue that any defense of this common view incurs serious costs. I then show how a popular view about resultant luck can make the rejection of the common view palatable.
  •  105
    Truth and Predication
    Dialogue 45 (4): 774-777. 2006.
  •  110
    Epistemic Modals and Indirect Weak Suggestives
    Dialectica 66 (4): 583-606. 2012.
    I defend a contextualist account of bare epistemic modal claims against recent objections. I argue that in uttering a sentence of the form ‘It might be that p,’ a speaker is performing two speech acts. First, she is (directly) asserting that in view of the knowledge possessed by some relevant group, it might be that p. The content of this first speech act is accounted for by the contextualist view. But the speaker's utterance also generates an indirect speech act that consists in a weak suggesti…Read more
  •  19
    Resultant Luck and Responsibility for Character
    Erkenntnis 91 (1): 155-166. 2026.
    According to a popular view, resultant luck does not affect the overall degree of responsibility of an agent. A lucky reckless driver who does not harm anyone is overall just as blameworthy as an unfortunate reckless driver who accidentally kills a pedestrian. This view appears to contradict a very plausible thesis about character formation, according to which responsibility for one’s character can increase one’s degree of responsibility for the actions motivated by that character. Given that ch…Read more
  •  105
    Doing One’s Reasonable Best: What Moral Responsibility Requires
    Journal of the American Philosophical Association 2 (1): 55--73. 2016.
  •  136
    Micro credit and the threshold of praiseworthiness
    Analytic Philosophy 63 (1): 28-43. 2020.
    Analytic Philosophy, Volume 63, Issue 1, Page 28-43, March 2022.
  •  107
    Culpability and Irresponsibility
    Criminal Law and Philosophy 12 (1): 167-181. 2018.
    I defend the principle that a person is blameworthy for her action only if that action was morally wrong. But what should we say about an agent who does the right thing based on bad motives? I present three types of cases that have these features. In each, I argue, the agent is not culpable for her action; however, she violates the norm of moral responsibility, and thus acts in a morally irresponsible way. This analysis, I show, has several virtues. It also has important theoretical ramification…Read more
  •  10
    Le contextualisme épistémologique
    In Robert Nadeau (ed.), Philosophies de la connaissance, Les Presses De L’université De Montréal. pp. 451-476. 2016.
  • The Meaning of Observation Sentences
    Eidos: The Canadian Graduate Journal of Philosophy 13
  •  854
    Defending the Coherence of Epistemic Contextualism
    Episteme 11 (3): 319-333. 2014.
    According to a popular objection against epistemic contextualism, contextualists who endorse the factivity of knowledge, the principle of epistemic closure and the knowledge norm of assertion cannot coherently defend their theory without abandoning their response to skepticism. After examining and criticizing three responses to this objection, we offer our own solution. First, we question the assumption that contextualists ought to be interpreted asassertingthe content of their theory. Second, w…Read more
  •  104
    Posséder un concept selon Peacocke
    Dialogue 40 (2): 219-. 2001.
    ABSTRACT: Christopher Peacocke defends a sophisticated version of Conceptual Role Theory. For him, the nature of a concept is completely determined by an account of what it is to possess that concept. The possession conditions he puts forward rest on the notion of primitively compelling transitions or, more recently, on the idea of implicit conceptions. I show that his account is circular and appeals to a dubious distinction between constitutive transitions and transitions that depend on factual…Read more
  •  84
    Haters and egoists: Quality of will and degrees of moral responsibility
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 61 (3): 491-505. 2023.
    I argue that a capacity‐based account of blameworthiness and praiseworthiness is superior to an account based on quality of will. I focus on four types of cases about which the two accounts disagree and show that the capacity‐based view offers a better treatment. As part of my argument, I motivate the distinction between an assessment of a person's moral character, as reflected by her action, and an assessment of her blameworthiness or praiseworthiness for that action.
  •  64
    À propos d'une objection contre le naturalisme modéré
    Philosophiques 30 (2): 411-415. 2003.
  •  171
    Cheap knowledge and easy questions
    Grazer Philosophische Studien 77 (1): 127-146. 2008.
    Contrastivism is the idea that knowledge is question-relative: to know is to be able to answer a contextually salient question. Constrastivism's main selling point is that it promises to respect ordinary speakers' judgments about knowledge claims made in various contexts. I show that contrastivism fails to fulfill this promise, and argue that the view I call epistemic pluralism does much better in this respect.
  • Logique et comportement verdictif
    Logique Et Analyse 33 (132): 295-309. 1990.
  •  200
    Contextualism, invariantism and semantic blindness
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 87 (4): 639-657. 2009.
    Epistemic contextualism, many critics argue, entails that ordinary speakers are blind to the fact that knowledge claims have context-sensitive truth conditions. This attribution of blindness, critics add, seriously undermines contextualism. I show that this criticism and, in general, discussions about the error theory entailed by contextualism, greatly underestimates the complexity and diversity of the data about ordinary speakers? inter-contextual judgments, as well as the range of explanatory …Read more
  •  282
    Indeterminacy, incompleteness, indecision, and other semantic phenomena
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 41 (1): 73-98. 2011.
    This paper explores the relationships between Davidson's indeterminacy of interpretation thesis and two semantic properties of sentences that have come to be recognized recently, namely semantic incompleteness and semantic indecision.1 More specifically, I will examine what the indeterminacy thesis entails for sentences of the form 'By sentence S (or word w), agent A means that m' and 'Agent A believes that p.' My primary goal is to shed light on the indeterminacy thesis and its consequences. I …Read more
  •  55
    Translating Observation Sentences
    Disputatio 14 (67): 375-395. 2022.
    I argue that pace Quine, indeterminacy of translation affects observation sentences. I illustrate this indeterminacy with examples and show how it is tied to the indeterminacy affecting the analytical status of observation categoricals. I propose my own construal of the thesis of indeterminacy of translation, according to which indeterminacy is based on the inextricability of meaning and belief. I explain why this construal should be favored over Quine’s.