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The Political Dimensions of Quotidian Choice and the Expressive Theory of Rationality
(Georgetown University, 2013)
Many of our everyday choices take place within sprawling and complex political structures and processes that bring about outcomes that we view as harms. Yet, because an individual's actions do not contribute measurably ...
The Language of Emotion
(Georgetown University, 2016)
In this dissertation, I defend a novel analysis of emotional expression, and then use it to explore the myriad ways in which emotional expressions function in communication. I argue that emotional expressions may be best ...
In Defense of Dependence on Moral Testimony
(Georgetown University, 2015)
In this dissertation, I defend dependence on moral testimony. To that end, against pessimistic views regarding dependence on moral testimony I argue that moral testimony can confer epistemic warrant and that dependence on ...
The Phenomenology of Moods: Time, Place, and Normative Grip
(Georgetown University, 2017)
Moods are powerful forces in our lives. When we enter into a mood—such as an anxious, irritable, depressed, bored, tranquil, or cheerful mood—we often find ourselves thinking, feeling, and acting in ways that are out of ...
The Ethics of Public Health Nudges
(Georgetown University, 2012)
There is growing interest in using non-coercive interventions to promote and protect public health, in particular "health nudges." Behavioral economist Richard Thaler and law scholar Cass Sunstein coined the term nudge to ...
Owing it to Us
(Georgetown University, 2013)
Ethical theorists have traditionally analyzed duties, both individual and collective, into two categories: duties to others and duties to oneself. Reflection upon the moral domain, however, suggests cases in which an ...
Mental Diversity and Meaningful Psychiatric Disabilities
(Georgetown University, 2017)
This dissertation provides a philosophical investigation of key claims arising from the psychiatric user/survivor movement. Users/survivors insist that psychiatric conditions do not necessarily diminish someone’s agency ...
What We Owe to Those We Make: A Causalist Account of Procreators' Parental Obligations
(Georgetown University, 2017)
Nearly everyone believes that we have special moral obligations to care for the children we create. Surprisingly, a satisfying philosophical justification of this belief has proved elusive. Causalist accounts ground these ...
Sacrifices: The Paradigmatic, the Demanding, and the Heroic
(Georgetown University, 2014)
The concept of sacrifice harbors challenging puzzles and occupies an integral but neglected place in discussions of the problem of overly demanding moral duties. I argue that sacrificing is a distinctive type of act ...
On Reasons to Live Justifiably: In Support of a Humean Contractualist Account of Moral Reasons
(Georgetown University, 2014)
The goal of this dissertation is to explore a new answer to the very old question, "Why be moral?" Or, as the question is often phrased today, "What reason does one have to be moral?" I begin my investigation into this ...