Ryan Stringer

Lincoln Land Community College
  •  466
    Must Love Arise Naturally?
    Journal of Philosophical Research 50 115-132. 2025.
    This paper tries to establish the epistemic status of the intuition that love must arise naturally rather than artificially to be genuine in order to determine the ramifications for love’s nature and our metaphysical theories of love. After discussing some hypothetical cases where love seems to arise artificially along with some where it seems to arise naturally in order to clarify the difference between love arising “naturally” versus “artificially” and shed further light on what the intuition …Read more
  •  573
    Romantic Partnership as Friendship
    Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 12 1280-1312. 2025.
    This paper defends the thesis that romantic partnership is a form of friendship by arguing that such partnership is a romantic kind of close friendship. Despite its modest philosophical popularity, the thesis that romantic partnership is a form of friendship stands in need of an adequate defense, and so the paper first reconstructs and critically evaluates previous philosophical attempts to vindicate the thesis in order to motivate the need for a fresh defense of it. To substantiate the thesis, …Read more
  •  1213
    How Will I Know If He Really Loves Me? Toward an Epistemology of Love
    Philosophical Forum 55 (3): 271-292. 2024.
    This paper attempts to fill an epistemological gap in our theorizing about love with a sketch of an epistemology of love that unfolds by addressing Whitney Houston’s famous epistemological questions pertaining to how we can know whether another loves us. After arguing for three possible sources of the knowledge of love, it offers initial answers to how the knowledge of the presence or absence of another’s love can be acquired from the relevant possible sources previously established. These initi…Read more
  •  2638
    Love's Possessiveness
    Philosophy International Journal 5 (2): 000252. 2022.
    This paper addresses the important questions of whether love is possessive and, if so, in what way is it possessive and in what ways is it not. It argues that love is possessive in the way that loyalty is possessive, but it is not possessive in the ways that property-owners are possessive of their mere property, abusers are possessive of their partners, jealousy is possessive of the object it fears losing, or obsession is possessive of its object. By doing so it hopes to shed light on the nature…Read more
  •  1261
    Ethical Emergentism and Moral Causation
    Journal of Moral Philosophy 18 (4): 331-362. 2021.
    This paper focuses on a recently articulated, emergentist conception of ethical naturalism and its commitment to causal efficacy, or the idea that moral properties have causal powers, along with its supporting commitment to moral causation. After I reconstruct the theory, I explain how it offers some interesting theoretical benefits to moral realists in virtue of its commitment to causal efficacy. Then, after locating some examples of moral causation in support of this commitment, I present and …Read more
  •  1111
    Can Our Beloved Pets Love Us Back?
    In Simon Cushing (ed.), New Philosophical Essays on Love and Loving, Springer Verlag. pp. 241-268. 2021.
    Can our beloved cats and dogs love us back? This chapter aims to find a satisfactory theory of love that substantiates the claim that they can. It begins by reconstructing and critically evaluating recent attempts by scientists to show that dogs can love humans back. Although these attempts are argued to be unsuccessful, it is further argued that they illuminate the need for an adequate theory of love and offer us some plausible ideas about love that direct us to two recent philosophical theorie…Read more
  •  188
    The Syndrome of Love
    Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 7 480-510. 2021.
    What is love? In this paper I argue that love is a psychological syndrome, or an enormously complex cluster of psychological attitudes and dispositions that’s accompanied by a corresponding set of symptoms that flow from it. More specifically, I argue that love is an affectionate loyalty that takes different shapes across cases and that manifests itself in some set of behavioral and emotional expressions, where this set of expressions also varies across cases. After laying down three theoretical…Read more
  •  1299
    Realist Ethical Naturalism for Ethical Non-Naturalists
    Philosophical Studies 175 (2): 339-362. 2018.
    It is common in metaethics today to draw a distinction between “naturalist” and “non-naturalist” versions of moral realism, where the former view maintains that moral properties are natural properties, while the latter view maintains that they are non-natural properties instead. The nature of the disagreement here can be understood in different ways, but the most common way is to understand it as a metaphysical disagreement. In particular, the disagreement here is about the reducibility of moral…Read more