•  45
    Hohfeld’s distinction between liberties and anti-interference claims generates the puzzling category of naked liberties: X has the liberty to φ while Y likewise has the liberty to forcibly prevent X’s φ-ing. I explain how the Hohfeldian scheme creates this category, clarify its structure, and defend it against recent objections by Heidi Hurd and Michael Moore. Their analogy between intra-personal and inter-personal moral conflicts does not support eliminating naked liberties from our conceptual …Read more
  •  58
    Moral Luck, Blameworthiness and mens rea
    Grazer Philosophische Studien 102 (2): 207-216. 2025.
    Two assassins shoot at their respective targets—one hits, one misses. Two drivers text while driving—one hits a pedestrian, the other does not. Are the agents who cause harm more blameworthy than their counterparts? Philosophers often claim we must treat these cases symmetrically: outcome luck either matters in both cases or in neither. I challenge this assumption by defending an asymmetrical view. While outcome luck makes a difference in the drivers’ case, it cannot reduce the missing assassin’…Read more
  •  167
    The fundamental laws of logic hold independently of us. Thus, if there were beings who thought in contradiction to these laws, they would be in error. The paper defends this stance of Frege's against Wittgenstein's combination of logical constitutivism and logical naturalism. Frege's arguments against psychologism are more general than his usual wording suggests and are, at their core, directed against the whole of logical naturalism. Contrary to prevailing opinions on this subject, I argue that…Read more