Bile & Bodhisattvas: Śāntideva on Justified Anger (Journal of Buddhist Ethics Vol.18)
I offer some objections to the 8th century Buddhist philosopher Śāntideva’s argument that anger towards those that harm us is never justified. I suggest that by reading the argument as practical advice rather than as a philosophical claim about rational coherence, Śāntideva still has important insights even for those who reject his philosophical reasoning.

Rationally Self-Ascribed Anti-Expertise (Philosophical Studies Vol.151 No.3)
I argue against the claim, defended by Adam Elga and Andy Egan, that it is never rational for agents like us to ascribe anti-expertise to ourselves by suggesting cases where self-ascribed anti-expertise makes real life agents more rational than they otherwise would be.

Tibetan Philosophy (Article for The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
A brief introduction to some of the major issues in Tibetan philosophy.