•  31
    Reading and Character: Weil and McDowell on Naïve Realism and Second Nature
    Philosophical Investigations 41 (3): 267-290. 2018.
    Both Simone Weil and John McDowell analogize value or meaning to sensations such as colour or heat, and this analogy is a strategy for resisting anti‐realism. However, McDowell's analogy tacitly accepts the very dualism which he is criticizing, while Weil's analogy is both more naïve and more radical than his. Like McDowell, Weil argues that virtuous character is the actualization of a second nature, but she emphasizes the role of the body in this process. Fully trained, the agent's body is a tr…Read more
  •  19
    Introduction: What Is Lyric Philosophy?
    Philosophy and Literature 39 (1): 188-201. 2015.
    What is lyric philosophy? The clearest response to that question is the book-length investigation by Canadian philosopher and poet Jan Zwicky. If philosophy can be defined as thinking in love with clarity, then lyric philosophy might be roughly understood as such thinking in which clarity assumes the form of resonance. Among her paradigmatic lyric philosophers, Zwicky includes (inter alia) the aphorists Herakleitos and Ludwig Wittgenstein. Lyric is distinguished by its deep structure, which is p…Read more
  •  19
    Lyric Details and Ecological Integrity
    Ethics and the Environment 22 (1): 89-109. 2017.
    1. My topic is integrity, and the relation between an integrated structure and its component details. Let me begin with an image. The jazz trumpeter and composer Wynton Marsalis says: In American life, you have all of these different agendas, you have conflict all the time, and we’re attempting to achieve harmony through conflict. Which seems strange to say that, but it’s like an argument that you have with the intent to work something out, not an argument that you have with the intent to argue.…Read more
  •  14
    Attending: an ethical art
    McGill-Queen's University Press. 2021.
    Attending--patient contemplation focused on a particular being--is a central ethical activity that has not been recognized by any of the main moral systems in the European philosophical tradition. That tradition has imagined that the moral agent is primarily a problem solver and world changer when what might be needed most is a witness. Moral theory has been agonized by dualism--motivation is analyzed into beliefs and desires, descriptions of facts and dissatisfactions with them, while action is…Read more