PUBLICATIONS
PUBLICATIONS
ARTICLES AND BOOK CHAPTERS
4. (Forthcoming) "Do AIs Have Dasein? A Heideggerian-Girardian Answer". In S. Goodhart and T. Ryba (Eds.) Mimetic Theory, AI, and Desiring Machines. Bloomsbury.
Abstract. This paper is one (among many) approach to the question, “are AIs persons or are they conscious?” from a Heideggerian perspective. Here I argue for two claims. First, I argue that René Girard’s mimetic analysis of mitsein (being-with), one of Heidegger’s foundational concepts, illuminates what Heidegger takes mitsein to be. Second, I claim that this Girardian analysis gives us a way to answer the question of whether AIs have Dasein, to which I argue that the answer is negative. Specifically, I claim that Dasein requires mitsein, and mitsein (according to Girard’s analysis) requires mimesis. Moreover, mimesis requires that the mimetic being finds truth in the mimetic object, that is, it comports in a meaningful way toward the unconcealed object being imitated by Dasein. But since AIs cannot comport in meaningful ways toward the object of imitation, i.e., they are not truth-apt, they cannot engage in mimetic behavior, hence cannot have mitsein. But, necessarily, Dasein is being-with-others, Therefore, AIs cannot have Dasein. If we assume (as I think Heidegger would) that every person has Dasein, we may justifiably conclude that AIs are not persons, at least from a Heideggerian ontology.
3. (2024) "Some Ruminations on Perfect Being Theism," Síntesis. Revista de filosofía.
Abstract. According to Perfect Being Theism, God is the absolutely perfect (i.e., greatest possible) being. The notion of absolute perfection can be analyzed in different ways. On one interpretation, to be absolutely perfect requires the exemplification of all absolute perfections. On another interpretation, to be perfect requires the exemplification of the best possible combination of perfections. It seems that the latter analysis is better than the former, because it does not fall prey to the problem of incompatible perfections, viz., that there (probably) are perfections that cannot be coexemplified. Here I argue that even if perfect being theists accept the latter analysis, the problem of incompatibility does not go away. I argue that perfections are (probably) incomparable: it is false that some perfection is better than, worse than, or equally good to another perfection. If so, then it is impossible or at least extremely difficult to say that among the combination of perfections there are, there is one that is best among them. I also argue that adopting the former analysis with some restrictions (as Mark Murphy does) leads to the same incompatibility and incomparability problems.
2. (2024) "Divine command theory and the (supposed) incoherence of self-commanding," Religious Studies.
Abstract. Theological voluntarism is a family of metaethical views that share the claim that deontological statuses of actions are dependent on or identical with some divine feature. Adams’s version of this theistic metaethical view is a divine command theory (DCT). According to Adams’s DCT, the property being-morally-obligated is identical to the property being-commanded-by-God. Thus, a natural consequence of Adams’s DCT is that an agent is morally obligated to do something just in case God commands that agent to do such a thing. From Adams’s DCT, it follows that God is morally obligated to act just in case God commands himself to act. Quinn argued that commanding oneself is incoherent and, therefore, that God cannot be morally obligated to act. The claim that commanding oneself is incoherent has seldom been discussed in the divine command theory literature. This paper is an attempt to change that. Here, I argue (contra Quinn) that that no constitutive rule (or condition of satisfaction) of self-commands is incoherent from which it follows that self-commanding is not an incoherent speech act. I conclude that divine command theorists can, without the charge of incoherence, affirm that God can be morally obligated because God can command himself.
1. (2024) "Incompatible and incomparable perfections: a new argument against perfect being theism," International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 96, 35-53.
Abstract. Perfect being theism is the view that the perfect being exists and the property being-perfect is the property being-God. According to the strong analysis of perfection, a being is perfect just in case it exemplifies all perfections. On the other hand, the weak analysis of perfection claims that a being is perfect just in case it exemplifies the best possible combination of compatible perfections. Strong perfect being theism accepts the former analysis while weak perfect being theism accepts the latter. In this paper, I argue that there are good reasons to reject both versions of perfect being theism. On the one hand, strong perfect being theism is false if there are incompatible perfections; I argue that there are. On the other hand, if either no comparison can be made between sets of perfections, or they are equally good, then there is no best possible set of perfections. I argue for the antecedent of this conditional statement, concluding that weak perfect being theism is false. In the absence of other analyses of perfection, I conclude that we have reason to reject perfect being theism.
DISSERTATION
(2025) "Moderate Theistic Metaethics and Its Implications for the Problem of Evil," Purdue University.
Abstract. In contemporary philosophy of religion and metaethics, Divine Command Theory (DCT) posits that moral obligations depend on God’s commands. This theory has garnered significant scholarly attention. However, existing versions of DCT often rely on problematic metaethical assumptions, particularly that God cannot command himself and that all moral obligations depend on divine commands. This dissertation critiques these prevailing extant versions of DCT and proposes a better alternative: Moderate Divine Command Theory (MDCT). According to MDCT, only some (not all) moral obligations depend on divine commands. This dissertation shows that MDCT can salvage important theistic commitments while retaining the virtues of extant DCT and eschewing contentious assumptions: overall, it is a more defensible and nuanced account. Furthermore, this dissertation establishes that MDCT better withstands common objections to extant DCT. Lastly, this dissertation shows that accepting MDCT—particularly, opening the possibility of God’s self-commanding—allows us to provide a novel solution to the logical problem of evil.