Research
Published papers
“Berkeley on Whether Human Sensible Ideas Are Identical to Certain Divine Ideas.” Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy (published online 2023, forthcoming in print).
“Kant’s Ontological Phenomenalism.” Kant-Studien 114 (2023): 247-270.
“Kant on Why Criminal Offenders Must Be Punished.” Southern Journal of Philosophy 60 (2022): 637-663.
“Against the Hybrid Interpretation of Kant’s Theory of Punishment.” Jahrbuch für Recht und Ethik / Annual Review of Law and Ethics 28 (2020): 115-133.
“Hume and Kant on Identity and Substance.” In Kant and the Scottish Enlightenment, edited by Elizabeth Robinson and Christopher Surprenant, 230-244. New York: Routledge, 2017.
“Kant’s Theoretical Reasons for Belief in Things in Themselves.” Kant-Studien 107 (2016): 589-616.
“The Idea of the Systematic Unity of Nature as a Transcendental Illusion.” Kantian Review 16 (2011): 429-448.
Works in progress
Reason and Retribution: Kant’s Justification of Criminal Punishment (under contract with Bloomsbury).
“Criminal Punishment as Credible and Collective Condemnation of Criminal Offenses.”
“Kant on the Independence of Right.”
“Berkeley on Whether Human Sensible Ideas Are Identical to Certain Divine Ideas.” Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy (published online 2023, forthcoming in print).
“Kant’s Ontological Phenomenalism.” Kant-Studien 114 (2023): 247-270.
“Kant on Why Criminal Offenders Must Be Punished.” Southern Journal of Philosophy 60 (2022): 637-663.
“Against the Hybrid Interpretation of Kant’s Theory of Punishment.” Jahrbuch für Recht und Ethik / Annual Review of Law and Ethics 28 (2020): 115-133.
“Hume and Kant on Identity and Substance.” In Kant and the Scottish Enlightenment, edited by Elizabeth Robinson and Christopher Surprenant, 230-244. New York: Routledge, 2017.
“Kant’s Theoretical Reasons for Belief in Things in Themselves.” Kant-Studien 107 (2016): 589-616.
“The Idea of the Systematic Unity of Nature as a Transcendental Illusion.” Kantian Review 16 (2011): 429-448.
Works in progress
Reason and Retribution: Kant’s Justification of Criminal Punishment (under contract with Bloomsbury).
“Criminal Punishment as Credible and Collective Condemnation of Criminal Offenses.”
“Kant on the Independence of Right.”