Emory University
Department of Philosophy
PhD
Newport News, Virginia, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
History of Western Philosophy
  • Descartes and the importance of being resolute: A psychological consequentialist analysis
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy. forthcoming.
    Resolution plays a defining role in Descartes' conception of virtue, but it is not obvious why resolution has such a prominent place in Cartesian ethics, and what Descartes says on the matter admits of different interpretations. I survey three ways of explaining the importance of being resolute for Descartes: (1) the decision-theoretic analysis, according to which resolution optimises decisional outcomes in a proto-decision-theoretic manner; (2) the deontological analysis, according to which in …Read more
  •  29
    This chapter addresses the question of the ontology of mathematical entities, particularly geometrical figures (though I also touch on numbers), in Spinoza. I discuss the status of mathematical entities as beings of reason and mount a case against mathematical antirealism by linking it with acosmism. Despite the fact that geometrical figures per se are beings of reason, I argue for a realist interpretation of geometrical figures as the determinations of finite bodies. Advancing this argument req…Read more
  •  10
    In this chapter, I provide an interpretation of Spinoza’s scientific method and discuss the interaction of reason and imagination in Spinozan science. I address a number of interpretive issues pertaining to reason, including the nature, origin, and adequacy of common notions. I also address the issue of the adequacy of the findings of Spinozan science raised by the role of the imagination therein. Ultimately, I argue for a hypothetico-deductive interpretation of Spinoza’s scientific method, stre…Read more
  •  24
    The topic of this chapter is Spinoza’s notion (or, more accurately, notions) of essence. I argue for a spectrum interpretation of essences in Spinoza, distinguishing between common essences at the level of attribute and infinite mode at one extreme, singular essences at the level of finite individuals at the other extreme, and species essences in the middle (which, I argue, exist only as beings of reason). I also clarify Spinoza’s notions of formal essence and actual essence and address the sens…Read more
  •  11
    This chapter motivates my general strategy of approaching interpretive issues in Spinoza’s epistemology, especially the natures of the three kinds of knowledge, via an interrogation of the ontology of mathematical entities. I provide relevant background regarding the “mathematization of nature” in the seventeenth century, contrasting different forms of mathematical realism and antirealism, and canvassing the respective views of Descartes, Galileo, Gassendi, and Hobbes as representative of the in…Read more
  •  20
    This chapter argues that a due consideration of the nature of true mathematical ideas and the use to which Spinoza puts them against skeptical disputation suggest that his philosophical methodology is more Cartesian than has often been appreciated. The discussion of this chapter allows me to introduce a number of the major concepts and themes that scaffold the discussion of ensuing chapters, in particular, the distinction between intrinsic and extrinsic features of ideas, the key epistemic notio…Read more
  •  11
    Conclusion
    In Spinoza’s Epistemology through a Geometrical Lens, Springer Verlag. pp. 227-238. 2021.
    In this concluding chapter, I reflect upon the portrait of Spinoza’s epistemology that emerges over the course of the book, defend its sanguine, Cartesian cast, and highlight, in closing, an important epistemological contrast between Spinoza and Descartes.
  •  22
    This chapter addresses the nature and scope of intuitive knowledge, Spinoza’s emphasis on its superiority over reason, and the knowledge of essences of which it is capable. With the help of a geometrical example modeled on, but more suggestive than, Spinoza’s fourth proportional example, I argue for a “method interpretation” of the distinction between reason and intuitive knowledge, according to which they differ only in their respective methods of arriving at the same knowledge content. Accordi…Read more
  •  11
    This chapter is devoted, in part, to developing an example of Spinozan science in practice, and exhibiting the role of geometry therein. In this regard, I offer a reading of Spinoza’s epistolary writings on optics and his treatment of a question of optimal lens shape. I also address a further objection to my realist interpretation of geometrical figures stemming from Letter 12, as well as the difficulty raised by the incompleteness of Spinoza’s thinking about physics for any interpretation of Sp…Read more
  •  50
    Irresolution and Other Weaknesses of Soul in Descartes
    Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 107 (2): 263-292. 2025.
    This paper contributes to a better understanding of Cartesian irresolution by clarifying its relation to akrasia and wantonness. It argues that irresolution (qua passion) is the same as neither akrasia nor wantonness, but is, like them, a kind of weakness of soul. If akrasia consists in having what Descartes calls ‘firm and decisive judgments’ (F&D judgments) but failing to act on them, and wantonness consists in not having any F&D judgments at all, but acting completely at the behest of the pas…Read more
  • Rehumanizing Spinoza's free man
    In Ursula Goldenbaum & Christopher Kluz (eds.), Doing without Free Will: Spinoza and Contemporary Moral Problems, Lexington Books. 2015.
  •  88
    This book interrogates the ontology of mathematical entities in Spinoza as a basis for addressing a wide range of interpretive issues in Spinoza’s epistemology—from his antiskepticism and philosophy of science to the nature and scope of reason and intuitive knowledge and the intellectual love of God. Going against recent trends in Spinoza scholarship, and drawing on various sources, including Spinoza’s engagements with optical theory and physics, Matthew Homan argues for a realist interpretation…Read more
  •  22
    Understanding Ignorance: The Surprising Impact of What We Don't Know (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 72 (2). 2018.
  •  99
    Geometrical Figures in Spinoza's Book of Nature
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 56 (3): 455-476. 2018.
    the view of spinoza as a scion of the mathematico-mechanistic tradition of Galileo and Descartes, albeit perhaps an idiosyncratic one, has been held by many commentators and might be considered standard.1 Although the standard view has a prima facie solid basis in Spinoza's conception of the physical world as extended, law-bound, and deterministic, it has come under sustained criticism of late. Arguing that, for Spinoza, numbers and figures are mere beings of reason and mathematical conceptions …Read more
  •  123
    Memory aids and the Cartesian circle
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 26 (6): 1064-1083. 2018.
    ABSTRACTIn answering the circularity charge, Descartes consistently distinguished between truths whose demonstrations we currently perceive clearly and distinctly and truths whose demonstrations we merely remember having perceived clearly and distinctly. Descartes uses C-truths to prove God’s existence, thus validating R-truths. While avoiding one form of circularity, this introduces another circle, for Descartes believes that God’s existence validates R-truths even when itself an R-truth. I con…Read more
  •  4
    Rationalism, Continental
    Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2014.
    Continental Rationalism Continental rationalism is a retrospective category used to group together certain philosophers working in continental Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries, in particular, Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz, especially as they can be regarded in contrast with representatives of “British empiricism,” most notably, Locke, Berkeley, and Hume. Whereas the British empiricists held that … Continue reading Rationalism, Continental →.
  •  32
    Church, Jennifer. Possibilities of Perception (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 68 (2): 418-420. 2014.
  •  119
    Spinoza and the Problem of Mental Representation
    International Philosophical Quarterly 54 (1): 75-87. 2014.
    Spinoza’s mind-body thesis states that the mind is the idea of the body. At the same time, Spinoza is clear in affirming that we have ideas of external bodies. There is a question, therefore, of how to reconcile two contending objects of perception: the human body qua object of the mind, on the one hand, and the myriad bodies external to ours, on the other. After evaluating various commentators’ attempts to address the issue, I make two primary claims: the object of sense perception in Spinoza i…Read more
  •  42
    Everything in Its Right Place: Spinoza and Life by the Light of Nature by Joseph Almog (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 68 (4): 836-838. 2015.
  •  144
    On the Alleged Exceptional Nature of Thought in Spinoza
    Journal of Philosophical Research 41 1-16. 2016.
    Since modes of the attribute of thought are ideas of the modes of all the other attributes in Spinoza, the scope of thought appears to be equal to that of all the other attributes combined. This suggests that thought is exceptional, and threatens to upset Spinoza’s doctrine of parallelism, according to which thought is just one among an infinity of attributes each expressing the divine essence in its own unique way. After providing an overview of attempts to solve the problem of thought’s scope …Read more