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571Coherentism, brain science, and the meaning of life: A response to ThagardPhilosophical Psychology 26 (4): 622-624. 2013.In his ?Nihilism, Skepticism, and Philosophical Method,? Paul Thagard claims that my critique of his The Brain and the Meaning of Life misapprehends his argument. According to Thagard, the critique wrongly assumes that the book offers foundationalist justifications for Thagard's views whereas, in fact, the justifications his book presents are coherentist. In my response, I show that the claim that my critique depends on foundationalist assumptions is ungrounded. Moreover, the appeal to coherenti…Read more
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1543Foundationless Freedom and Meaninglessness of Life in Sartre's: Being and NothingnessSartre Studies International 18 (1): 1-8. 2012.This paper critically examines Sartre's argument for the meaninglessness of life from our foundationless freedom. According to Sartre, our freedom to choose our values is completely undetermined. Hence, we cannot rely on anything when choosing and cannot justify our choices. Thus, our freedom is the foundation of our world without itself having any foundation, and this renders our lives absurd. Sartre's argument presupposes, then, that although we can freely choose all our values we have a meta-…Read more
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632Conceptualizing great meaning in life: Metz on the good, the true, and the beautifulReligious Studies 49 (4): 505-514. 2013.This article is a reply to Thaddeus Metz's (2011). I suggest that Metz's theory is too broad since it entails that merely understanding Einstein's or Darwin's views can make a life highly meaningful. Furthermore, it is unclear whether , toward which highly meaningful lives are oriented, may or may not be necessary conditions to , how completely the former should explain the latter, and whether Metz's account is indeed non-consequentialist. While acknowledging the importance of Metz's contributio…Read more
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575Are You Entitled to Affirmative Action?International Journal of Applied Philosophy 11 (2): 17-22. 1997.
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738An Answer of Behalf of GuaniloPhilosophy and Theology 7 (1): 81-96. 1992.The ontological proof is wrong because it can be used to prove not only the existence of God, but also of imaginary entities such as spirits of stones and trees. etc. It is faulty because it proves too much; it can be used to prove not only the existence of God, but also the existence of a vast number of imaginary entities to the existence of which theists would not like to commit themselves.
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1169Benatar on the Badness of All Human LivesPhilosophia 49 (1): 333-345. 2020.This paper presents a critique of David Benatar’s arguments on the badness of all human lives. I argue that even if Benatar is right that there is an asymmetry between the good and the bad in life so that each “unit” of bad is indeed more effective than each “unit” of good, lives in which there is a lot of good and only little bad are still overall good. Even if there are more unfulfilled than fulfilled desires in life, a distinction should be drawn between desires to fulfill important goals and…Read more
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489After postmodernism: meaning of life and educationEducational Philosophy and Theory 50 (14): 1539-1540. 2018.
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548The Paradox of the EndPhilosophy 70 (274). 1995.We set ourselves ends and strive to achieve them. We hope that their attainment will improve our condition. The closer we get to our goals, the happier we feel. Paradoxically, however, when we finally do achieve them our joy is sometimes diminished. We have a sense of insignificance and emptiness, and we feel that in attaining our goal we have lost the meaningfulness and balance we experienced while we were striving towards it. In some ways, it seems to us, the struggle is more gratifying than t…Read more
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349Smuts, Aaron. Welfare, Meaning and Worth. New York: Routledge, 2018. Pp. 168. $140.00Ethics 129 (1): 140-144. 2018.
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952An argument for marriagePhilosophy 79 (3): 475-481. 2004.This paper replies to two arguments against marriage presented by Dan Moller (Philosophy 78, 2003: 79–91). One of Moller's arguments examines several ways in which the marriage promise could be explained, and shows that none of them is viable. The other argument suggests that marriage may not be a worthwhile enterprise since marriages frequently fail, in that they become loveless or end up in divorce. I argue that the marriage promise can be explained in a way unconsidered by Moller, which rende…Read more
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University of HaifaProfessor
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Areas of Specialization
| Value Theory |
| The Meaning of Life |
| Topics in Feminist Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| Value Theory |
| The Meaning of Life |
| Feminist Philosophy |