•  366
    In this paper, I draw attention to a familiar yet overlooked epistemic state: puzzlement. We experience that by which we are puzzled as being in some way incomprehensible to us. Puzzlement is thus distinct from the mere absence of understanding. It is a polar rather than privative opposite of understanding. The distinction between puzzlement and the mere absence of understanding, I go on to argue, raises a novel problem for reductive analyses of understanding in terms of knowledge.
  •  677
    The Right to a Justification
    Political Philosophy 2 (2): 496-520. 2025.
    Many institutions and organizations now delegate important decisions to algorithms. These algorithms promise greater predictive accuracy, at a lower operating cost than the human decision-makers they replace. But they also have the distinct disadvantage of being “black boxes”: we lack intelligible explanations of why they arrive at the decisions they do. Those adversely affected by these decisions, it seems, may reasonably object to the opaque nature of the decision-process. My aim in this paper…Read more
  •  701
    The Object of Moral Understanding
    Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 11 (n/a). 2024.
    In the recent literatures in which moral understanding has played a starring role, it is assumed that moral understanding is a species of explanatory understanding. That is, it is assumed that instances of moral understanding are of the form ‘S understands why p,’ where p is some explicitly moral proposition, paradigmatically about an action being morally right or wrong. This paper highlights some shortcomings of this explanatory picture of moral understanding and articulates a different, comple…Read more
  •  1108
    Being understood
    Philosophical Issues 34 (1): 184-195. 2024.
    Philosophical work in the ethics of thought focuses heavily on the ethics of belief, with, in recent years, a particular emphasis on the ways in which we might wrong other people either through our beliefs about them, or our failure to believe what they tell us. Yet in our own lives we often want not merely to be believed, but rather to be understood by others. What does it take to understand another person? In this paper, I provide an account of interpersonal understanding that speaks to this w…Read more
  •  1424
    Moral Understanding Between You and Me
    Philosophy and Public Affairs 52 (3): 327-357. 2024.
    Much attention has been paid to moral understanding as an individual achievement, when a single agent gains insight into distinctly moral matters. Crucially overlooked, I argue, is the phenomenon of shared moral understanding, when you and I understand moral matters together, in a way that can’t be reduced to each of us having moral understanding on our own. My argument pays close attention to two central moral practices: justifying our actions to others, and apologizing for wrongdoing. I argue …Read more
  •  1463
    Solidarity and the Work of Moral Understanding
    Philosophical Quarterly 74 (2): 525-545. 2024.
    Because moral understanding involves a distinctly first-personal grasp of moral matters, there is a temptation to think of its value primarily in terms of achievements that reflect well on its possessor: the moral worth of one's action or the virtue of one's character. These explanations, I argue, do not do full justice to the importance of moral understanding in our moral lives. Of equal importance is the value of moral understanding in our relations with other moral agents. In particular, I ar…Read more