•  19
    Review of Timothy Macklem, Beyond Comparison: Sex and Discrimination (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2004 (5). 2004.
  •  415
    Providing for Rights
    with Mark B. Lambeth
    Dialogue 27 (3): 489-. 1988.
    Gauthier's version of the Lockean proviso (in Morals by Agreement) is inappropriate as the foundation for moral rights he takes it to be. This is so for a number of reasons. It lacks any proportionality test thus allowing arbitrarily severe harms to others to prevent trivial harms to oneself. It allows one to inflict any harm on another provided that if one did not do so, someone else would. And, by interpreting the notion of bettering or worsening one's position in terms of subjective expected …Read more
  •  86
    Human reproductive interests: Puzzles at the periphery of the property paradigm
    Social Philosophy and Policy 29 (1): 106-125. 2012.
    Research Articles Donald C. Hubin, Social Philosophy and Policy, FirstView Article
  •  978
    The Moral Justification of Benefit/Cost Analysis
    Economics and Philosophy 10 (2): 169-194. 1994.
    Benefit/cost analysis is a technique for evaluating programs, procedures, and actions; it is not a moral theory. There is significant controversy over the moral justification of benefit/cost analysis. When a procedure for evaluating social policy is challenged on moral grounds, defenders frequently seek a justification by construing the procedure as the practical embodiment of a correct moral theory. This has the apparent advantage of avoiding difficult empirical questions concerning such matter…Read more
  •  1335
    Rape and the reasonable man
    Law and Philosophy 18 (2): 113-139. 1999.
    Standards of reasonability play an important role in some of the most difficult cases of rape. In recent years, the notion of the reasonable person has supplanted the historical concept of the reasonable man as the test of reasonability. Contemporary feminist critics like Catharine MacKinnon and Kim Lane Scheppele have challenged the notion of the reasonable person on the grounds that reasonability standards are gendered to the ground and so, in practice, the reasonable person is just the reason…Read more
  •  395
    Non-Tuism
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 21 (4). 1991.
    Contractarians view justice as being defined by a contract made by rational individuals. No one supposes that this contract is actual, and the fact that it is merely hypothetical raises a number of questions both about the assumptions under which it would be actual and about the force of hypothetical agreement that is contingent on these assumptions.Particular contractarian theories must specify the circumstances of the agreement and the endowments, beliefs, desires, and degree and type of ratio…Read more
  •  938
    Desires, Whims and Values
    The Journal of Ethics 7 (3): 315-335. 2003.
    Neo-Humean instrumentalists hold that anagent's reasons for acting are grounded in theagent's desires. Numerous objections have beenleveled against this view, but the mostcompelling concerns the problem of ``aliendesires'' – desires with which the agent doesnot identify. The standard version ofneo-Humeanism holds that these desires, likeany others, generate reasons for acting. Avariant of neo-Humeanism that grounds anagent's reasons on her values, rather than allof her desires, avoids this impli…Read more