- Beyond Petipa and Before the Academy: Plato, Socrates, and Alexei Ratmansky’s Serenade After Plato’s Symposium
- Movement: What Evolution and Gesture Can Teach Us About Its Centrality in Natural History and Its Lifelong Significance
- Is Tap Dance a Form of Jazz Percussion?
- Rhythm and Movement: The Conceptual Interdependence of Music, Dance, and Poetry
- Dance Seen and Dance‐Screened
- On Dancers as Coauthors
- Identity in Dance: What Happened?
- Can There Be Conceptual Dance?
- Audiences Appreciating Dances
- Some Stabs at the Ontology of Dance
- Beauty Always Dies: The Philosophical Significance of Nonenduring Artworks
- Three Kinds of Movement
- Dance as Art, Theatre, and Practice: Somaesthetic Perspectives
- The Paradox of Post‐Performance Amnesia
- Dances, Danceworks, and Choreographic Works: A Plea for Conceptual Clarity
- “Like‐Sensing Subjects”: Husserl and Dance
- Image Consciousness, Movement Consciousness
- Free Will, Self‐Creation, and the Paradox of Moral Luck
- Agent‐Regret and Accidental Agency
- Playing the Hand You’re Dealt: How Moral Luck Is Different from Morally Significant Plain Luck (and Probably Doesn’t Exist)
- Flickers of Freedom and Moral Luck
- Thinking Outside the (Traditional) Boxes of Moral Luck
- Moral Luck and Deviant Causation
- Luckily, We Are Only Responsible for What We Could Have Avoided
- Moral Luck and Control
- Transformative Moral Luck
- Debunking, Vindication, and Moral Luck
- Free Will and Moral Responsibility: Manipulation, Luck, and Agents’ Histories
- Practical Decision and the Cognitive Requirements for Blameworthiness
- Putting the Luck Back Into Moral Luck
- Kant Does Not Deny Resultant Moral Luck
- The Attributionist Approach to Moral Luck
- Moral Responsibility for Large‐Scale Events: The Difference between Climate Change and Economic Crises
- Mistakes Were Made: The Role of Catallactic Bias in the Financial Crisis
- Blaming Ourselves
- Mind the Gap: Virtue Ethics and the Financial Crisis
- Democracy and the European Central Bank’s Emergency Powers
- The Ethics of Consumer Credit: Balancing Wrongful Inclusion and Wrongful Exclusion
- The Corruption of Financial Benchmarks: Individual and Collective Responsibility in the Global Banking Sector
- Moral Culture and the Financial Crisis in Light of the Icelandic Experience
- Who’s Responsible? (It’s Complicated.) Assigning Blame in the Wake of the Financial Crisis
- Risky Pay and the Financial Crisis: Who’s Responsible?
- Responsibility in the Financial Crisis
- The Moral Accountability of the Financial Industry for the Global Financial Crisis
- Collective Responsibility and the Purposes of Banks
- Some Tranching of Moral Responsibility Ascriptions to Individuals in Shadow Banking during the Financial Crisis
- Banking Culture and Moral Responsibility for the Financial Crisis
- Not in the Mood for Intentionalism
- Emotions in Early Sartre: The Primacy of Frustration
- Shame, Embarrassment, and Guilt
- Hope, Powerlessness, and Agency
- More than a Feeling: Affect as Radical Situatedness
- Revelatory Regret and the Standpoint of the Agent
- Grief and the Unity of Emotion
- Emotional Phenomenology: Toward a Nonreductive Analysis
- Emotional Self-Alienation
- Enactivism and the Perception of Others’ Emotions
- Image Consciousness and the Horizonal Structure of Perception
- The Epistemic Import of Affectivity: A Husserlian Account
- Reductive Representationalism and Emotional Phenomenology
- Emotional Self‐Alienation
- No Justice in Climate Policy? Broome versus Posner, Weisbach, and Gardiner
- The Struggle for Climate Justice in a Non-Ideal World
- Anthropocentrism in Climate Ethics and Policy
- Saving Species but Losing Wildness: Should We Genetically Adapt Wild Animal Species to Help Them Respond to Climate Change?
- Flourishing in the Age of Climate Change: Finding the Heart of Sustainability
- Two Theories of Responsibility for Past Emissions of Carbon Dioxide
- Corporate Responsibility, Democracy, and Climate Change
- From the Anthropocene to the Ecozoic: Philosophy and Global Climate Change
- Climate Matters for Future People
- Climate Policy When Preferences Are Endogenous—and Sometimes They Are
- A Reply To My Critics
- On Climate Matters: Offsetting, Population, and Justice
- A Global Right of Water
- Climate Justice Beyond International Burden Sharing
- Equalizing the Intergenerational Burdens of Climate Change–An Alternative to Discounted Utilitarianism
- The Ethics of Dieselgate
- High Stakes: Inertia or Transformation?
- Should We Tolerate Climate Change Denial?
- Climate Matters Pro Tanto, Does It Matter All-Things-Considered?