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The aim of this essay is to argue that, if a robust form of moral realism is true, then moral vagueness is ontic vagueness. The argument is by elimination: I show that neither semantic nor epistemic approaches to moral vagueness are satisfactoryMoral Vagueness Is Ontic VaguenessEthics 126 (2): 257-282. 2016. -
The moral parody argument against panpsychismPhilosophical Studies 179 (6): 1821-1852. 2021.I exploit parallel considerations in the philosophy of mind and metaethics to argue that the reasoning employed in an important argument for panpsychism overgeneralizes to support an analogous position in metaethics: panmoralism. Next, I raise a number of problems for panmoralism and thereby build a case for taking the metaethical parallel to be a reductio ad absurdum of the argument for panpsychism. Finally, I contrast panmoralism with a position recently defended by Einar Duenger Bohn and argu…Read more
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The Limits of Rational Belief Revision: A Dilemma for the Darwinian DebunkerNoûs 55 (3): 717-734. 2020.We are fallible creatures, prone to making all sorts of mistakes. So, we should be open to evidence of error. But what constitutes such evidence? And what is it to rationally accommodate it? I approach these questions by considering an evolutionary debunking argument according to which (a) we have good, scientific, reason to think our moral beliefs are mistaken, and (b) rationally accommodating this requires revising our confidence in, or altogether abandoning the suspect beliefs. I present a di…Read more
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Some things we can know just by thinking about them: for example, that identity is transitive, that Gettier’s Smith does not know that the man who will get the job has ten coins in his pockets, that the ratio between two and six holds also between one and three, that it is wrong to wantonly torture innocent sentient beings, and various other things that simply strikeus, intuitively, as true when we consider them. The question is how : how can we know things just by thinking about them?Grasping the Third RealmOxford Studies in Epistemology 5 1-38. 2015. -
The Real Problem with Evolutionary Debunking ArgumentsPhilosophical Quarterly 67 (268): 508-33. 2017.There is a substantial literature on evolutionary debunking arguments (EDAs) in metaethics. According to these arguments, evolutionary explanations of our moral beliefs pose a significant problem for moral realism, specifically by committing the realist to an unattractive pessimism about the prospects of our having moral knowledge. In this paper, I argue that EDAs exploit an equivocation between two distinct readings of their central claim. One is plausibly true but has no epistemic relevance, a…Read more
APA Western Division
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Areas of Specialization
| Meta-Ethics |
Areas of Interest
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| Philosophy of Consciousness |
| Time |
| Well-Being |
| Normative Ethics |
| The A Priori |
| Intuition |
| Free Will |
| Socialism and Marxism |