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400Why Some Things Should Not Be for Sale: The Moral Limits of MarketsOxford University Press. 2010.In Why Some Things Should Not Be for Sale, philosopher Debra Satz takes a penetrating look at those commodity exchanges that strike most of us as problematic. What considerations, she asks, ought to guide the debates about such markets? What is it about a market involving prostitution or the sale of kidneys that makes it morally objectionable? How is a market in weapons or pollution different than a market in soybeans or automobiles? Are laws and social policies banning the more noxious markets …Read more
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499Liberalism, economic freedom, and the limits of marketsSocial Philosophy and Policy 24 (1): 120-140. 2007.This paper points to a lost and ignored strand of argument in the writings of liberalism's earliest defenders. These “classical” liberals recognized that market liberty was not always compatible with individual liberty. In particular, they argued that labor markets required intervention and regulation if workers were not to be wholly subjugated to the power of their employers. Functioning capitalist labor markets (along with functioning credit markets) are not “natural” outgrowths of exchange, b…Read more
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114Free to Lose: An Introduction to Marxist Economic Philosophy, John Roemer. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1988, x + 203 pages (review)Economics and Philosophy 6 (2): 315. 1990.
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2International Economic JusticeIn Hugh LaFollette (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Practical Ethics, Oxford University Press Uk. 2003.
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198Economic Analysis, Moral Philosophy and Public PolicyCambridge University Press. 2006.This book shows through argument and numerous policy-related examples how understanding moral philosophy can improve economic analysis, how moral philosophy can benefit from economists' analytical tools, and how economic analysis and moral philosophy together can inform public policy. Part I explores the idea of rationality and its connections to ethics, arguing that when they defend their formal model of rationality, most economists implicitly espouse contestable moral principles. Part II addre…Read more
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709The moral limits of markets: The case of human kidneysProceedings of the Aristotelian Society 108 (1pt3): 269-288. 2008.This paper examines the morality of kidney markets through the lens of choice, inequality, and weak agency looking at the case for limiting such markets under both non-ideal and ideal circumstances. Regulating markets can go some way to addressing the problems of inequality and weak agency. The choice issue is different and this paper shows that the choice for some to sell their kidneys can have external effects on those who do not want to do so, constraining the options that are now open to the…Read more
Stanford, California, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Philosophy of Social Science |
| Social and Political Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| Social and Political Philosophy |
| Philosophy of Social Science |