Moral Psychology

Javier Guillot

[image of Javier Guillot]
Contact Information
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Previous Degrees: 

B.A. Philosophy (Distinguished with Honors), Universidad Nacional de Colombia, 2007

Publications: 

(2010 - forthcoming). Cubides, P., Guillot, J., Rey, D. & Rivera, M. L. "Referencia, nombres propios y comunidad lingüística". Areté - Revista de Filosofía [http://revistas.pucp.edu.pe/arete/].

Presentations: 

Oct. 2009
Seeing Double and Finding Fraud: Hwang Woo-Suk and His Stem Cell Photographs
(with prof. Malcolm Ashmore, Loughbourough University, UK)
Society for the Social Studies of Science (4S) Conference, Washington, D.C.

Advisors: 

Cristina Bicchieri

Curriculum Vitæ: 

Adrienne Martin

[image of Prof. Martin]
Assistant Professor of Philosophy
Ph.D. University of North Carolina
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Research Interests: 

I am most interested in what it is to be a moral agent. I am especially interested in moral deliberation and practical reasoning. In broadest terms, my work examines the relation between practical reasoning and our non-rational faculties, our rationally optional values and commitments, and our capacity to be self-determining or autonomous. Although I always aim to develop general theories at fairly high levels of abstraction, I carry out much this examination on the ground, so to speak, by analyzing the interplay between practical reasoning, non-rational faculties and values, and autonomy in the context of clinical care and research.

Currently, I have two primary projects. First, I am writing a series a papers that asks what specific value commitments, if any, are presupposed by rational deliberation and action. Second, in another series of papers, I explore the interaction between the emotions and practical reasoning; I am particularly interested in hope, and how the exercise of imagination involved in hope influences, and is influenced by, practical reasoning.

Drafts of some of these papers are available on my personal website (url above).

Selected Publications: 

"Hopes and Dreams," forthcoming in Philosophy and Phenomenological Research "Hope and Exploitation," Hastings Center Report, 38 (5): 49. "Tales Publicly Allowed," Hastings Center Report, 73(1): 33-40. “How to Argue for the Value of Humanity,” Pacific Philosophical Quarterly, 87(1): 96-125.

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