•  736
    Enticing Emotions
    Oxford Studies in Metaethics. forthcoming.
    You’re required to grieve your friend’s death, permitted to regret spilling the milk, and forbidden to envy your colleague’s enviable publication record. What explains this variability in the demandingness of the norms on emotion? Although the fact that you’ve lost your friend doesn’t change, it’s appropriate for your grief to fade over time. How can emotions fittingly diminish in intensity when their objects’ properties remain constant? This paper provides a principled, unified solution to both…Read more
  •  915
    On the “Isolation Account” of belief’s ethical significance, our beliefs can be noninstrumentally ethically significant independently of their epistemic status and in isolation from other attitudes or actions. However, critics object that fundamental ethical significance should instead be located in nondoxastic attitudes in belief’s vicinity. This article develops an alternative view—the “Constitutive Inheritance Account”—on which our beliefs can inherit ethical significance from the more fundam…Read more
  •  1531
    Although doubt (Tvivl) and despair (Fortvivlelse) are widely recognized as two central and closely associated concepts in Kierkegaard’s authorship, their precise relationship remains opaque in the extant interpretive literature. To shed light on their relationship, this paper develops a novel interpretation of Kierkegaard’s understanding of the connection between despair and our agency over our beliefs, and its significance for Kierkegaard’s ethics of belief. First, I show that an important yet …Read more
  •  1507
    Resolving to believe: Kierkegaard's direct doxastic voluntarism
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 109 (2): 548-574. 2024.
    According to a traditional interpretation of Kierkegaard, he endorses a strong form of direct doxastic voluntarism on which we can, by brute force of will, make a “leap of faith” to believe propositions that we ourselves take to be improbable and absurd. Yet most leading Kierkegaard scholars now wholly reject this reading, instead interpreting Kierkegaard as holding that the will can affect what we believe only indirectly. This paper argues that Kierkegaard does in fact endorse a restricted, sop…Read more
  •  1536
    Kierkegaard on the Relationship Between Practical and Epistemic Reasons for Belief
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 105 (2): 233-266. 2024.
    On the dominant contemporary accounts of how practical considerations affect what we ought to believe, practical considerations either encroach on epistemic rationality by affecting whether a belief is epistemically justified, or constitute distinctively practical reasons for belief which can only affect what we ought to believe by conflicting with epistemic rationality. This paper argues that Søren Kierkegaard offers a promising alternative view on which practical considerations can affect what…Read more
  •  1849
    Belief, blame, and inquiry: a defense of doxastic wronging
    Philosophical Studies 180 (10-11): 2955-2975. 2023.
    According to the thesis of doxastic wronging, our beliefs can non-derivatively wrong others. A recent criticism of this view claims that proponents of the doxastic wronging thesis have no principled grounds for denying that credences can likewise non-derivatively wrong, so they must countenance pervasive conflicts between morality and epistemic rationality. This paper defends the thesis of doxastic wronging from this objection by arguing that belief bears distinctive relationships to inquiry and…Read more
  •  2056
    Kierkegaard on belief and credence
    European Journal of Philosophy 32 (2): 394-412. 2024.
    Kierkegaard's pseudonym Johannes Climacus famously defines faith as a risky “venture” that requires “holding fast” to “objective uncertainty.” Yet puzzlingly, he emphasizes that faith requires resolute conviction and certainty. Moreover, Climacus claims that all beliefs about contingent propositions about the external world “exclude doubt” and “nullify uncertainty,” but also that uncertainty is “continually present” in these very same beliefs. This paper argues that these apparent contradictions…Read more
  •  1396
    A Permissivist Alternative to Encroachment
    Philosophers' Imprint 25 (1). 2025.
    As a slew of recent work in epistemology has brought out, there is a range of cases where there's a strong temptation to say that prudential and (especially) moral considerations affect what we ought to believe. There are two distinct models of how this can happen. On the first, “reasons pragmatist” model, the relevant prudential and moral considerations constitute distinctively practical reasons for (or against) belief. On the second, “pragmatic encroachment” model, the relevant prudential and …Read more