•  17
    Non-Evidential Reasons to Believe
    with Jonathan Adler
    In Timothy Chan (ed.), The Aim of Belief, Oxford University Press. pp. 140-166. 2013.
    Evidentialism is the thesis that evidence or, more generally, epistemic reasons, exhausts the considerations relevant to whether one ought or ought not to believe. In this chapter Adler and Hicks defend conceptual evidentialism, the claim that this fact derives from the very concept of belief, from two strategies for showing that this is impossible. They consider and reply to two anti-evidentialist strategies. The first attempts to show that evidentialism is unduly conservative, since it ignores…Read more
  •  31
    Towards a Social History of Analytic Philosophy (review)
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 34 (1): 116-126. 2026.
    1. Analytic philosophy, as the tradition we recognize today, coalesced in the United States in the period immediately after the second world war. This raises a variety of interesting and important...
  •  107
    Moral Motivation: the Practical Philosophy of Wilfrid Sellars
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 31 (5): 718-729. 2023.
    1. In the preface to his magnum opus, Science and Metaphysics, Wilfrid Sellars describes the final chapter on ‘objectivity and intersubjectivity in ethics’ as ‘the keystone of the argument,’ becaus...
  •  133
    Sellars's Transcendental Philosophy
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 30 (5): 537-547. 2022.
    Luz Seiberth's interpretation of Sellars as a transcendental philosopher promises to change the way we read Sellars. Nonetheless, I dispute two of his central claims: that by depicting ”picturing” as as a transcendental imposition we can see it as addressing a ”vertical” constraint that Kant does not detect; and that Sellars's transcendental philosophy commits him to a Kantian ”necessitarianism” about categorical strucure. Ultimately, I conclude, Seiberth's focus on Sellars's relationship to Kan…Read more
  •  1149
    Both Wilfrid Sellars and John McDowell reject Kant’s conclusion that the world is fundamentally unknowable, and on similar grounds: each invokes conceptual change, what I call the diachronic instability of a conceptual scheme. The similarities end there, though. It is important to Sellars that the world is only knowable at “the end of inquiry” – he rejects a commonsense realism like McDowell’s for its inability to fully appreciate diachronic instability. To evaluate this disagreement, I consider…Read more
  •  186
    Singular mental abilities
    European Journal of Philosophy 30 (2): 639-660. 2021.
    Lucy O'Brien has argued that defenders of the object-dependence of singular thought should attend to mental agency. A recent trend in action theory, towards what John Maier calls ‘agentive modality’, suggests that we conceive agency in terms of the exercise of abilities, and this is how I propose to approach O'Brien's challenge. For Gareth Evans, an early defender of object-dependence, maintained that thinking is the exercise of a complex of abilities. The debate about object-dependence gives wa…Read more
  •  156
    Wilfrid Sellars and the task of philosophy
    Synthese 198 (10): 9373-9400. 2021.
    Critical attention to Wilfrid Sellars’s “Philosophy and the Scientific Image of Man” (PSIM) has focused on the dubious Peircean optimism about scientific convergence that underwrites Sellars’s talk of “the” scientific image. Sellars’s ultimate Peircean ontology has led Willem deVries, for instance, to accuse him of being a naturalistic “monistic visionary.” But this complaint of monism misplays the status of the ideal end of science in Sellars’s thinking. I propose a novel reading of PSIM, foreg…Read more
  •  133
    Connotation and Frege's Semantic Dualism
    History of Philosophy Quarterly 36 (4): 377-398. 2019.
    The traditional distinction between Millian and Fregean theories of names presupposes that what Mill calls ‘connotation’ lines up with what Frege calls ‘sense.’ This presupposition is false. Mill’s talk of connotation is an attempt to bring into view the line of thought that crystallizes in Frege’s distinction between concept and object. This latter is the semantic dualism of my title.
  •  1865
    Sellars, Price, and the Myth of the Given
    Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy 8 (7). 2020.
    Wilfrid Sellars's "Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind" begins with an argument against sense-datum epistemology. There is some question about the validity of this attack, stemming in part from the assumption that Sellars is concerned with epistemic foundationalism. This paper recontextualizes Sellars's argument in two ways: by showing how the argument of EPM relates to Sellars's 1940s work, which does not concern foundationalism at all; and by considering the view of H.H. Price, Sellars's tea…Read more
  •  120
    The Presentational Use of Descriptions
    Analytic Philosophy 60 (4): 361-384. 2019.
    Discussing Keith Donnellan's distinction between attributive and referential uses of descriptions, Gareth Evans considered a speaker he found it natural to describe as having “given expression to” a singular thought, though he insisted she was not referring to the person she has in mind. On accounts otherwise similar to Evans's, to express a singular thought just is to refer. Thus, as he does not explain why this speaker might speak this way, it is tempting to ignore this as a slip. On the contr…Read more
  •  108
    Naturalism in Action
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 52 (6): 609-635. 2009.
    Can a naturalist earn the right to talk of a shared empirical world? Hume famously thought not, and contemporary stipulative naturalists infer from this inability that the demand is somehow unnatural. The critical naturalist, by contrast, claims to earn that right. In this paper, I motivate critical naturalism, arguing first that stipulative naturalism is question begging, and second, that the pessimism it inherits from Hume about whether the problem can be solved is misplaced. Hume's mistake wa…Read more
  •  175
    Pretense and fiction-directed thought
    Philosophical Studies 172 (6): 1549-1573. 2015.
    Thought about fictional characters is special, and needs to be distinguished from ordinary world-directed thought. On my interpretation, Kendall Walton and Gareth Evans have tried to show how this serious fiction-directed thought can arise from engagement with a kind of pretending. Many criticisms of their account have focused on the methodological presupposition, that fiction-directed thought is the appropriate explanandum. In the first part of this paper, I defend the methodological claim, and…Read more
  •  224
    A note on pretense and co-reference
    Philosophical Studies 149 (3). 2010.
    Anna Pautz has recently argued that the pretense theory of thought about fiction cannot explain how two people can count as thinking about the same fictional character. This is based on conflating pretending and the serious thought that can be based on pretend. With this distinction in place, her objections are groundless.