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208Moral Character and the Iteration ProblemUtilitas 7 (2): 289. 1995.Moral evaluation is concerned with the attribution of values whose distinction into two broad groups has become familiar. On the one hand, there are the most general moral values of lightness, wrongness, goodness, badness, and what ought to be or to be done. On the other, there is a great diversity of more specific moral values which these objects can have: of being a theft, for instance, or a thief; of honesty, reliability or callousness. Within the recent body of work attempting to restore to …Read more
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85Aretaic CognitivismAmerican Philosophical Quarterly 32 (4): 395-406. 1995.This paper defends the claim that there is deontic knowledge - knowledge of rightness and wrongness - which can be inferred from aretaic knowledge - knowledge of the possession of virtue-attributes. In doing so, it seeks to address two forceful objections, identified at the outset. The first is that the only way of making the claim appear plausible is by assuming a practice of virtue-ascription which actually makes the reverse inference. The second objection is that there is that "aretaic cognit…Read more
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149Many writers have followed Peter Singer in drawing an analogy between assisting needy people at a distance and saving someone’s life directly. Arguments based on this analogy can take either a subsumptive or a non-subsumptive form. Such arguments face a serious methodological challenge.
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904Particularism and moral theory: Particularism and presumptive reasons: Garrett CullityAristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 76 (1). 2002.Weak particularism about reasons is the view that the normative valency of some descriptive considerations varies, while others have an invariant normative valency. A defence of this view needs to respond to arguments that a consideration cannot count in favour of any action unless it counts in favour of every action. But it cannot resort to a global holism about reasons, if it claims that there are some examples of invariant valency. This paper argues for weak particularism, and presents a fram…Read more
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536Equality and globalizationIn Keith Horton and Haig Patapan (eds), Reconceiving Equality in a More Global World, Routledge. pp. 6-22. 2004.Garrett Cullity.
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8247BeneficenceIn Angus Dawson Richard Ashcroft & John McMillan Heather Draper (eds.), Principles of Health Care Ethics, Wiley. pp. 19-26. 2007.Garrett Cullity.
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269Virtue ethics, theory, and warrantEthical Theory and Moral Practice 2 (3): 277-294. 1999.Are there good grounds for thinking that the moral values of action are to be derived from those of character? This virtue ethical claim is sometimes thought of as a kind of normative ethical theory; sometimes as form of opposition to any such theory. However, the best case to be made for it supports neither of these claims. Rather, it leads us to a distinctive view in moral epistemology: the view that my warrant for a particular moral judgement derives from my warrant for believing that I am a …Read more
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655Demandingness, "Ought", and Self-ShapingIn Marcel van Ackeren & Michael Kühler (eds.), The Limits of Moral Obligation: Moral Demandingness and Ought Implies Can, Routledge. pp. 147-62. 2016.Morality, it is commonly argued, cannot be extreme in the demands it makes of us, because “ought” implies “can”, and normal human psychology places limits on the extent to which most of us are capable of devoting our lives to the service of others. To evaluate this argument, we need to distinguish different uses of “ought” and “can”. Having distinguished these uses, we find that there is more than one defensible version of the principle that “ought” implies “can”. However, these distinctions can…Read more
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162The Context-Undermining of Practical ReasonsEthics 124 (1): 8-34. 2013.Can one fact deprive another of the status of a reason for action—a status the second fact would have had, but for the presence of the first? Claims of this kind are often made, but they face substantial obstacles. This article sets out those obstacles but then argues that there are at least three different ways in which this does happen.
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66Practical TheoryIn Garrett Cullity & Berys Gaut (eds.), Ethics and practical reason, Oxford University Press. pp. 101--24. 1997.Garrett Cullity.