•  143
    Moral Contingentism
    Philosophy Compass 20 (5). 2025.
    This paper surveys a number of views that fall under the name moral contingentism, the position in metaethics that claims that the fundamental ethical facts are metaphysically contingent. In other words, the fundamental ethical facts are true in some worlds, but not all. I look at three kinds of contingentism: law-based contingentism, particularist contingentism, and nonseparationism. In each case, I outline the relevant view, give reasons we might find it attractive, and then discuss aspects of…Read more
  •  113
    Ethical Realism, written by William J. FitzPatrick
    Journal of Moral Philosophy 21 (3-4): 449-452. 2024.
  •  127
    Why bother with so what?
    Philosophical Studies 1-19. forthcoming.
    I address a family of objections I label the _So What?_ objection to robust non-naturalist realism (or, just non-naturalism). This objection concludes that non-naturalism fails to identify the _moral properties_ in virtue of failing to explain why non-natural properties would have all the features we expect _moral properties_ to have and can be extended to provide the conclusion that the non-naturalist is therefore immoral. I argue that _So What?_ is question-begging because it disallows non-nat…Read more
  •  2
    The End of Morality
    Metapsychology Online Reviews. 2020.
    In this review, I provide a brief overview of the book and then make a brief statement about where I think the debate stands with respect to error theoretic moral semantics.
  •  45
    I review T. Ryan Byerly's treatment of the possible virtue of others-centeredness.
  •  106
    Irreducibly Thick Evaluation is not Thinly Evaluative
    Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 23 (3): 651-666. 2020.
    In this paper, I criticize the pairing of irreducible thickness with the traditional view of evaluation which says evaluation is a matter of encoding good or bad in some way. To do this, I first explicate the determination view, which holds that irreducibly thick concepts are to thin concepts as determinates are to determinables. I then show that, even if the determination view did establish irreducible thickness, it would not have proven that the evaluative is well understood as being an instan…Read more