•  6
    Partial Desert
    In David Shoemaker (ed.), Oxford Studies in Agency and Responsibility: Volume 1, Oxford University Press Uk. pp. 246-262. 2013.
    Theories of moral desert focus only on the personal culpability of the agent to determine the amount of blame and punishment the agent deserves. Here an alternative account of desert is defended, one that does not focus only on facts about offenders and their offenses. In this revised framework, personal culpability can do no more than set upper and lower limits for deserved blame and punishment. For more precise judgments within that spectrum, additional factors must be considered, factors that…Read more
  •  6
    Relative Responsibility and Theism
    In Kevin Timpe & Daniel Speak (eds.), Free Will and Theism: Connections, Contingencies, and Concerns, Oxford University Press Uk. pp. 99-111. 2016.
    Jerry Walls argues that Christian theists have special reason to embrace libertarianism about moral responsibility. According to Walls, accepting the premises of classical theism makes a compatibilist view untenable. Why? Because libertarianism is the only position that squares with a belief in God’s perfect goodness. This chapter argues that Walls is mistaken and that there are multiple reasonable conceptions of moral responsibility—even for theists. Like the rest of us, theists will be unable …Read more
  •  532
    Experimental philosophy
    Annual Review of Psychology 63 (1): 81-99. 2012.
    Experimental philosophy is a new interdisciplinary field that uses methods normally associated with psychology to investigate questions normally associated with philosophy. The present review focuses on research in experimental philosophy on four central questions. First, why is it that people's moral judgments appear to influence their intuitions about seemingly nonmoral questions? Second, do people think that moral questions have objective answers, or do they see morality as fundamentally rela…Read more
  •  132
    Strawson, Shoemaker, and the Hubris of Theories
    Criminal Law and Philosophy 13 (4): 561-572. 2019.
    David Shoemaker’s Responsibility from the Margins is chock full of valuable insights on the nature of our responsibility, and it has more in common with P.F. Strawson’s approach in “Freedom and Resentment” than the accounts of most philosophers who call themselves Strawsonians. On one central issue of interpretation, however, Shoemaker gets Strawson wrong. Like many interpreters, Shoemaker sees Strawson as defending a “quality of will” theory of responsibility. This idea fundamentally misunderst…Read more
  •  6
    Free Will and Experimental Philosophy: An Intervention
    In Levy Neil & Clausen Jens (eds.), Handbook on Neuroethics, Springer. pp. 273-286. 2014.
    This chapter reviews and then criticizes the dominant approach that experimental philosophers have adopted in their studies on free will and moral responsibility. Section “Experimental Philosophy and Free Will” reviews the experimental literature and the shared approach: probing for intuitions about the so-called compatibility question, whether free will is compatible with causal determinism. Section “The Intervention” argues that this experimental focus on the compatibility question is fundamen…Read more
  •  70
    Negotiating responsibility
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 41. 2018.
  •  80
    Very Bad Wizards
    The Philosophers' Magazine 79 119-120. 2017.
  •  114
    Restorative justice
    The Philosophers' Magazine 72 103-104. 2016.
  •  37
    Index
    In Relative Justice: Cultural Diversity, Free Will, and Moral Responsibility, Princeton University Press. pp. 223-230. 2012.
  •  9675
    The objective attitude
    Philosophical Quarterly 57 (228). 2007.
    I aim to alleviate the pessimism with which some philosophers regard the 'objective attitude', thereby removing a particular obstacle which P.F. Strawson and others have placed in the way of more widespread scepticism about moral responsibility. First, I describe what I consider the objective attitude to be, and then address concerns about this raised by Susan Wolf. Next, I argue that aspects of certain attitudes commonly thought to be opposed to the objective attitude are in fact compatible wit…Read more
  •  196
    Of zombies, color scientists, and floating iron bars
    PSYCHE: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Research On Consciousness 8. 2002.
    In this paper I challenge the core of David Chalmers' argument against materialism-the claim that "there is a logically possible world physically identical to ours, in which the positive facts about consciousness do not hold." First, I analyze the move from conceivability to logical possibility. Following George Seddon, I consider the case of a floating iron bar and argue that even this seemingly conceivable event has implicit logical contradictions in its description. I then show that the disti…Read more
  •  92
    Freedom Regained (review)
    The Philosophers' Magazine 73 110-111. 2016.
  •  159
    Required reading
    The Philosophers' Magazine 57 (57): 105-108. 2012.
  •  248
    In memoriam
    The Philosophers' Magazine 52 (52): 89-93. 2011.
    Experimental philosophy has received a great deal of attention in scholarly journals and the popular media. Often the topic of these articles is precisely what I claim is a non-issue – the value of experimental philosophy as a movement. And here I am writing about this same topic yet again. But I am not going to provide another argument for an obvious position. Instead, I’m writing this as an obituary – an obituary for the so-called controversy about experimental philosophy, and an attempt to di…Read more
  •  94
    This year marks the 80 th anniversary of Clarence Darrow’s brilliant and passionate defense of Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb, two wealthy teenagers who pled guilty to the kidnapping and murder of 14 year old Bobby Franks. On August 22, 1924 Darrow gave his famous twelve hour closing statement, bringing tears to the eyes of the presiding judge and saving his clients from the death penalty. Here are two excerpts from the summation.
  •  320
    The two faces of revenge: Moral responsibility and the culture of honor
    Biology and Philosophy 24 (1): 35-50. 2009.
    Retributive emotions and behavior are thought to be adaptive for their role in improving social coordination. However, since retaliation is generally not in the short-term interests of the individual, rational self-interest erodes the motivational link between retributive emotions and the accompanying adaptive behavior. I argue that two different sets of norms have emerged to reinforce this link: (1) norms about honor and (2) norms about moral responsibility and desert. I observe that the primar…Read more
  •  957
    Partial Desert
    In David Shoemaker (ed.), Oxford Studies in Agency and Responsibility: Volume 1, Oxford University Press Uk. 2013.
    Theories of moral desert focus only on the personal culpability of the agent to determine the amount of blame and punishment the agent deserves. I defend an alternative account of desert, one that does not focus only facts about offenders and their offenses. In this revised framework, personal culpability can do no more than set upper and lower limits for deserved blame and punishment. For more precise judgments within that spectrum, additional factors must be considered, factors that are in…Read more
  •  113
    In the first edition of A Very Bad Wizard: Morality Behind the Curtain – Nine Conversations, philosopher Tamler Sommers talked with an interdisciplinary group of the world’s leading researchers—from the fields of social psychology, moral philosophy, cognitive science, and primatology—all working on the same issue: the origins and workings of morality. Together, these nine interviews pulled back some of the curtain, not only on our moral lives but—through Sommers’ probing, entertaining, and well …Read more
  •  44
    Michael Smith’s The Moral Problem gives an admirably straightforward condition for moral rightness: an act is morally right in circumstance C only if under conditions of full rationality we would all want to perform that act. I will assume that this condition, if met, would make acts objectively right and therefore vindicate a robust form of metaethical realism. There remains the question, however, of whether this condition can be met. Smith considers several arguments that it cannot, and this p…Read more
  •  2764
    More work for hard incompatibilism
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 79 (3): 511-521. 2009.
    No Abstract
  •  481
    Darwin's nihilistic idea: Evolution and the meaninglessness of life (review)
    Biology and Philosophy 18 (5): 653-668. 2003.
    No one has expressed the destructive power of Darwinian theory more effectively than Daniel Dennett. Others have recognized that the theory of evolution offers us a universal acid, but Dennett, bless his heart, coined the term. Many have appreciated that the mechanism of random variation and natural selection is a substrate-neutral algorithm that operates at every level of organization from the macromolecular to the mental, at every time scale from the geological epoch to the nanosecond. But it …Read more