(PhD, UC Santa Barbara)
Philosophy Department
Building 11, Office E658A
Monash University VIC 3800
Australia
Curriculum Vitae (PDF)
In July of 2011, I began a 3-year position as a Lecturer (U.S. equivalent: Visiting Assistant Professor) in the Philosophy Department at Monash University. Most of my research is on moral and epistemic thought, reasoning, and motivation. I’m interested in what goes on in our heads when we think about what to do and what to believe. So I try to answer questions like:
- What motivates us to do what we believe is right?
- Are we all ultimately self-interested?
- How do emotions influence moral judgment?
- Do we have free will? Can we be morally responsible?
- What do we think is required for attaining knowledge?
- Can we attain moral knowledge?
My main overarching project right now is to develop a moral psychology in the rationalistic tradition that is naturalistic or empirically adequate. (I am increasingly attracted to contractualism as a particular framework for this.)
Recent articles of mine have appeared in Philosophical Studies, the European Journal of Philosophy, and the Spindel Supplement of the Southern Journal of Philosophy. (The latter is connected with the Spindel Emerging Scholar Prize I received for my paper “Egoism, Empathy, and Self-Other Merging.”) In some of my work, I have had the privilege of collaborating with some excellent scientists and philosophers, including Richard Holton (MIT), Jay G. Hull (Dartmouth) John Maier (Cambridge), Walter Sinnott-Armstrong (Duke), and Aaron Zimmerman (UCSB).
Some other professional activities include serving as Assistant to the General Editors at the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy (which I completely redesigned in 2009) and editing several categories for PhilPapers. In June of 2012, I participated in a summer seminar on Big Questions in Free Will at Florida State University, similar to the seminar I attended the previous summer on Perceptual, Moral, and Religious Skepticism at Purdue University.