•  78
    What's wrong?: applied ethicists and their critics (edited book)
    Oxford University Press. 2004.
    What's Wrong?: Applied Ethicists and Their Critics is a thorough and engaging introduction to applied ethics that covers virtually all of the issues in the field. Featuring more than ninety-five articles, it addresses standard topics--such as abortion, euthanasia, capital punishment, world hunger, and animal rights--and also delves into cutting-edge areas like cloning, racial profiling, same-sex marriage, prostitution, and slave reparations. The volume includes seminal essays by prominent philos…Read more
  •  3
    The moral case for the legalization of voluntary euthanasia
    Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 28 207-24. 1998.
  • Pavel Tichý
    A Companion to Philosophy in Australia and New Zealand. 2010.
  • Control, consequence and compatibilism
    In T. Childers (ed.), Between Words and Worlds, Filosofia. pp. 143-56. 2000.
  •  268
    Conditionalization, cogency, and cognitive value
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 48 (4): 533-541. 1997.
    Why should a Bayesian bother performing an experiment, one the result of which might well upset his own favored credence function? The Ramsey-Good theorem provides a decision theoretic answer. Provided you base your decision on expected utility, and the the experiment is cost-free, performing the experiment and then choosing has at least as much expected utility as choosing without further ado. Furthermore, doing the experiment is strictly preferable just in case at least one possible outcome …Read more
  •  66
    Verisimilitude reviewed
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 32 (3): 237-265. 1981.
  •  38
    The core of the truthmaker research program is that true propositions are made true by appropriate parts of the actual world. This idea seems to give realists their best shot at capturing a robust account of the dependence of truth on the world. For a part of the world to be a truthmaker for a particular it must suffice for, or necessitate, the truth of the proposition. There are two extreme and unsatisfactory truthmaker theories. At one extreme any part of the world (up to and including the who…Read more
  •  67
    The aesthetic adequacy of copies
    with David Ward
    British Journal of Aesthetics 29 (3): 258-260. 1989.
  •  12
    Is Science Progressive (review)
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 38 (2): 272-276. 1987.
  •  144
    Harmony, purity, truth
    Mind 103 (412): 451-472. 1994.
    David Lewis has argued against the thesis he calls "Desire as Belief", claiming it is incompatible with the fundamentals of evidential decision theory. I show that the argument is unsound, and demonstrate that a version of desire as belief is compatible with a version of causal decision theory.
  •  60
    Ability and Freedom
    with Pavel Tichy
    American Philosophical Quarterly 20 (2). 1983.
  • A decision theoretic argument against human embryo experimentation
    In M. Fricke (ed.), Essays in honor of Bob Durrant, University of Otago Press. pp. 111-27. 1986.
  •  148
    An objectivist's guide to subjective value
    Ethics 102 (3): 512-533. 1992.
  • The Unity of Theories
    Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science 117 343-368. 1989.
  •  26
    Rescuing Reason
    Philosophy 71 (277). 1996.
  • The possibility and value of possibilities for value
    From the Logical Point of View 3 46-62. 1992.