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2Two Senses of Moral Verdict and Moral OverridingnessIn Mark Timmons (ed.), Oxford Studies in Normative Ethics, Volume 6, Oxford University Press. pp. 215-240. 2016.This chapter distinguishes two senses in which philosophers speak of moral verdicts that invite two senses of moral overridingness. The first takes such moral verdicts to reflect decisive reasons for acting from a distinctively moral point of view; the second takes moral verdicts to reflect decisive reasons simpliciter for acting that are in some sense distinctively moral. Agents can be morally required to act in one of these senses without being morally required in the other, and the correspond…Read more
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16Consequentializing and DeontologizingIn Mark Timmons (ed.), Oxford Studies in Normative Ethics, Volume 3, Oxford University Press. pp. 123-153. 2013.That many values can be consequentialized — incorporated into a ranking of states of affairs — is often taken to support the view that apparent alternatives to consequentialism are in fact forms of consequentialism. Such consequentializing arguments take two very different forms. The first is concerned with the relationship between morally right action and states of affairs evaluated evaluator-neutrally, the second with the relationship between what agents ought to do and outcomes evaluated eval…Read more
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267Kantian ethics and the dutilitarian compromiseAsian Journal of Philosophy 4 (2): 1-8. 2025.Martin Peterson explores a compromise between what he characterizes “textbook” Kantian ethics and utilitarianism. But what if the textbook Kantian is not in crucial respects the Kantian; indeed, what if the textbook Kantian’s duty ethics is an ethical theory purged of precisely those elements of Kantian ethical theory that not only eliminate any such drive to compromise, but even demonstrate why the quest for such a compromise might be deeply misguided? In what follows, I will take up just such …Read more
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359"Practical Truth via Practical Soundness"In Christopher Frey & Jennifer A. Frey (eds.), Practical truth: historical and contemporary perspectives, Oxford University Press. 2025.I demonstrate that there are two distinct senses of practical truth at work in Anscombe’s philosophical writings, and that she characterizes the distinction as between truth in agreement with desire and truth in agreement with right desire. I explore her strategy of articulating these distinct senses and their interrelationship via her account of practical soundness, as distinguished both from practical validity and from merely purported practical soundness. Only her thin sense of practical tru…Read more
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573Against the Tyranny of OutcomesOxford University Press. 2024.Outcomes tyrannize over prevailing accounts of ethics, actions, reasons, attitudes, and social practices. The right action promotes the best outcome, the end of every action is an outcome to be promoted, reasons to act are reasons to promote outcomes, and preferences and desires rationalize actions that aim at the outcome of realizing their contents—making their contents true. The case for this tyranny turns on a related set of counterintuitive outcome-centered interpretations of deeply intuitiv…Read more
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751Davidson's Debt to AnscombeDialogue 59 (2): 219-233. 2020.RÉSUMÉL'interprétation de la philosophie pratique de Donald Davidson proposée par Robert Myers représente correctement maints aspects fondamentaux de sa pensée. Myers soutient à juste titre que Davidson évite les incohérences entre la position internaliste, l'objectivité éthique et le modèle croyance-désir en modifiant des éléments centraux de ce modèle, et que l'alternative proposée par Davidson rend légitime l'extension des arguments de l'interprétation et de la triangulation dans la sphère pr…Read more
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904The Consequentializing Argument Against...Consequentializing?Oxford Studies in Normative Ethics 12 253-275. 2022.Consequentializing involves both a strategy and conditions for its successful implementation. The strategy takes the features a target theory holds to be relevant to deontic evaluation of actions, and builds them into a counterpart ranking of outcomes. It succeeds if the result is 1) a substantive version of consequentialism that 2) yields the same deontic verdicts as the target theory. Consequentializers typically claim and their critics allow that all plausible alternative theories can be c…Read more
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2318Whose Problem Is Non-Identity?Journal of Moral Philosophy 12 (6): 699-730. 2014.Teleological theories of reason and value, upon which all reasons are fundamentally reasons to realize states of affairs that are in some respect best, cannot account for the intuition that victims in non-identity cases have been wronged. Many philosophers, however, reject such theories in favor of alternatives that recognize fundamentally non-teleological reasons, second-personal reasons that reflect a moral significance each person has that is not grounded in the teleologist’s appeal to outco…Read more
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546Consequentialism and the New Doing-Allowing DistinctionIn Christian Seidel (ed.), Consequentialism: New Directions, New Problems, Oxford University Press. pp. 176-197. 2018.Evaluator-relative consequentialists frequently endorse the traditional doing-allowing distinction. Yet their endorsement of this traditional distinction only serves to clear the way for their argument against a more fundamental doing-allowing distinction, an argument that one never ought to do something when this will allow something worse to happen. Unlike the case against its more traditional counterpart, the case against this deeper doing-allowing distinction can draw for support upon wide…Read more
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1071Exiting The Consequentialist Circle: Two Senses of Bringing It AboutAnalytic Philosophy 60 (2): 130-163. 2019.Consequentialism is a state of affairs centered moral theory that finds support in state of affairs centered views of value, reason, action, and desire/preference. Together these views form a mutually reinforcing circle. I map an exit route out of this circle by distinguishing between two different senses in which actions can be understood as bringing about states of affairs. All actions, reasons, desires, and values involve bringing about in the first, deflationary sense, but only some appea…Read more
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84Ethics: Twelve Lectures on the Philosophy of Morality, by David WigginsMind 123 (491): 970-975. 2014.
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1332Consequentialism and the Standard Story of ActionThe Journal of Ethics 22 (1): 25-44. 2018.I challenge the common picture of the “Standard Story” of Action as a neutral account of action within which debates in normative ethics can take place. I unpack three commitments that are implicit in the Standard Story, and demonstrate that these commitments together entail a teleological conception of reasons, upon which all reasons to act are reasons to bring about states of affairs. Such a conception of reasons, in turn, supports a consequentialist framework for the evaluation of action, upo…Read more
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2Where the traditional accounts of practical reason go wrongLogos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España] 10 157-166. 1989.
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792Comments on Douglas Portmore’s Commonsense ConsequentialismPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 88 (1): 225-232. 2014.
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4Paradox of DeontologyIn Hugh LaFollette (ed.), International Encyclopedia of Ethics, John Wiley & Sons. 2021.
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71A Kantian rationale for desire-based justificationPhilosophers' Imprint 1 1-16. 2001.This paper demonstrates that a rationale for a circumscribed form of desire-based justification can be developed out of a contemporary Kantian account as a natural extension of that account. It maintains that certain of Christine Korsgaard's recent arguments establish only that desires must have certain features antithetical to instrumentalism in order to justify. Other arguments purport to establish the standard (stronger) result: that because desires do not have these features, they cannot jus…Read more
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274Review of Michael Thompson, Life and Action: Elementary Structures of Practice and Practical Thought (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (2). 2009.
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36DeontologyIn Hugh LaFollette (ed.), The International Encyclopedia of Ethics, Wiley-blackwell. 2013.
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1342"Two Senses of Moral Verdict and Moral Overridingness"In Mark Timmons (ed.), Oxford Studies in Normative Ethics, Volume 6, Oxford University Press Uk. pp. 215-240. 2011.I distinguish two different senses in which philosophers speak of moral verdicts, senses that in turn invite two different senses of moral overridingness. Although one of these senses, that upon which moral verdicts are taken to reflect decisive reasons from a distinctively moral standpoint, currently dominates the moral overridingness debate, my focus is the other sense, upon which moral verdicts are taken to reflect decisive reasons that are distinctively moral. I demonstrate that the recent…Read more
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Claremont, California, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Meta-Ethics |
| Normative Ethics |
| Value Theory |
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Action |
| Philosophy of Law |
| Social and Political Philosophy |