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Bernard Prusak

John Carroll University
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  •  Publications
    41
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  • John Carroll University
    Regular Faculty
Boston University
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2003
Areas of Specialization
Normative Ethics
Applied Ethics
Social and Political Philosophy
Areas of Interest
Value Theory
  • All publications (41)
  •  41
    Who Are “We”?
    The Philosophers' Magazine 75 95-99. 2016.
  •  97
    America and the Political Philosophy of Common Sense (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 65 (2): 447-449. 2011.
    Sense-Datum Theories
  •  129
    The Problem with the Problem of the Embryo
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 82 (3): 503-521. 2008.
    This paper seeks to explain why the debate over the personhood of the embryo goes nowhere and is more likely to generate confusion than conviction. The paper presents two arguments. The first aims to establish that the question of the personhood of the embryo cannot be resolved by turning to science, althoughthe debate about the embryo has largely been a debate about the scientific facts. It is claimed that the rough facts on which the parties to the debate agree admit ofmultiple more refined ac…Read more
    This paper seeks to explain why the debate over the personhood of the embryo goes nowhere and is more likely to generate confusion than conviction. The paper presents two arguments. The first aims to establish that the question of the personhood of the embryo cannot be resolved by turning to science, althoughthe debate about the embryo has largely been a debate about the scientific facts. It is claimed that the rough facts on which the parties to the debate agree admit ofmultiple more refined accounts, among which science is powerless to adjudicate. So what happens is that the arguments go round and round, neither party convincing the other, both infuriating each another. The second argument concerns the implications of this claim for the many controversies involving the embryo. Here the question is how people who do not know what to make of the embryo might go about deciding how it should be treated.
    Philosophy of ReligionThe Argument from Evil
  •  1
    The debate over liberal eugenics-Reply
    Hastings Center Report 36 (2): 6-7. 2006.
    Eugenics
  •  136
    Breaking the Bond: Abortion and the Grounds of Parental Obligations
    Social Theory and Practice 37 (2): 311-332. 2011.
    Contemporary philosophy offers two main accounts of how parental obligations are acquired: the causal and the voluntarist account. Elizabeth Brake's provocative paper "Fatherhood and Child Support: Do Men Have a Right to Choose?" seeks to clear the way for the voluntarist account by focusing on the relevance of abortion rights to parental obligations. The present paper is concerned with rebutting Brake's argument that, if a woman does not acquire parental obligations to an unborn child just by h…Read more
    Contemporary philosophy offers two main accounts of how parental obligations are acquired: the causal and the voluntarist account. Elizabeth Brake's provocative paper "Fatherhood and Child Support: Do Men Have a Right to Choose?" seeks to clear the way for the voluntarist account by focusing on the relevance of abortion rights to parental obligations. The present paper is concerned with rebutting Brake's argument that, if a woman does not acquire parental obligations to an unborn child just by having voluntarily acted in such a way that had the reasonably foreseeable consequence of bringing him or her into being, neither does a man acquire parental obligations to a child once he or she is born just by having voluntarily acted in the same way.
    Value TheorySocial and Political Philosophy
  •  133
    Le rire à nouveau: Rereading Bergson
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 62 (4): 377-388. 2004.
    Henri BergsonAesthetics
  •  98
    Justice for Children: Autonomy Development and the State (review)
    Journal for Peace and Justice Studies 18 (1/2): 124-127. 2009.
    Social and Political PhilosophyInternational EthicsRights in Applied Ethics
  •  79
    On the Meaning of Life (review)
    International Philosophical Quarterly 44 (1): 110-111. 2004.
    The Meaning of Life
  •  79
    Kids, Kidneys, and the Moral Limits of Markets
    Journal of Catholic Social Thought 11 (2): 375-389. 2014.
    Social and Political PhilosophySocial and Political Philosophy, MiscellaneousGlobalization
  •  37
    What justifies the family? (review)
    The Philosophers' Magazine 68 112-113. 2015.
  •  92
    M.V. Dougherty, Moral Dilemmas in Medieval Thought: From Gratian to Aquinas. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011. Pp. x, 226. £61. ISBN: 9781107007079 (review)
    Speculum 88 (1): 279-281. 2013.
    13th/14th Century Philosophy
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