University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2018
Springfield, Massachusetts, United States of America
  •  78
    Actual utility, the mismatch problem, and the move to expected utility
    Philosophical Studies 174 (12): 3097-3108. 2017.
    The mismatch problem for consequentialism arises whenever the theory delivers mismatched verdicts between a group act and the individual acts that compose it. A natural thought is that moving to expected utility versions of consequentialism will solve this problem. I explain why the move to expected utility is not successful.
  •  15
    The Mismatch Problem for Act Consequentialism
    Dissertation, University of Massachusetts, Amherst. 2018.
    I present the mismatch problem for Act Consequentialism, and I critically evaluate some popular solutions before offering my own solution to a specific version of the problem. The mismatch problem arises for Act Consequentialism when a group could have done better, but no individual in the group had an alternative with a better outcome. In such cases, the theory delivers mismatched verdicts: it condemns what the group does, but it cannot condemn any of the individual acts. In the first chapter o…Read more