•  188
    This work seeks to develop a Kantian ethical theory in terms of a general ontology of values and norms together with a metaphysics of the person that makes sense of this ontology. It takes as its starting point Kant’s assertion that a good will is the only thing that has an unconditioned value and his accompanying view that the highest good consists in virtue and happiness in proportion to virtue. The soundness of Kant’s position on the value of the good will is defended against criticisms direc…Read more
  •  186
    Leading a Life of One’s Own: On Well-Being and Narrative Autonomy
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 59 65-82. 2006.
    We all want things. And although we might disagree on just how significant our wants, desires, or preferences are for the matter of how well we fare in life, we would probably all agree on some of them having some significance. So any reasonable theory about the human good should in some way acknowledge this. The theory that most clearly meets this demand is of course preferentialism, but even pluralist theories can do so. However, then they will at the same time bring aboard a classical problem…Read more
  •  76
    Means Paternalism and the Problem of Indeterminacy
    Moral Philosophy and Politics 10 (1): 47-67. 2023.
    Many contemporary defenders of paternalist interventions favor a version of paternalism focused on how people often choose the wrong means given their own ends. This idea is typically justified by empirical results in psychology and behavioral economics. To the extent that paternalist interventions can then target the promotion of goals that can be said to be our own, such interventions are prima facie less problematic. One version of this argument starts from the idea that it is meaningful to a…Read more
  •  243
    Leading Lives: On Happiness and Narrative Meaning
    Philosophical Papers 32 (3): 321-343. 2003.
    Abstract In contemporary moral philosophy, the standard way of understanding the constituents of the human good is in terms of a fairly limited number of features that contribute to our happiness independently of how they are situated in our lives. Even when this approach is supplemented by Moorean ideas about organic wholes, it still cannot do justice to the deep importance of how things are situated and even when meaning is seen as an important factor, it still tends to be treated as simply an…Read more
  • Litteraturen som guide till godhet
    Filosofisk Tidskrift 1. 2011.
  •  280
    Institutions, Ideology, and Nonideal Social Ontology
    Philosophy of the Social Sciences 49 (2): 137-159. 2019.
    Analytic social ontology has been dominated by approaches where institutions tend to come out paradigmatically as being relatively harmonious and mutually beneficial. This can however raise worries about such models potentially playing an ideological role in conceptualizing certain politically charged features of our societies as marginal phenomena or not even being institutional matters at all. This article seeks to develop a nonideal theory of institutions, which neither assumes that instituti…Read more
  •  201
    Future generations as rightholders
    Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 19 (6): 680-698. 2016.
    Many people believe that we have obligations with respect to future generations concerning the state of the environment that we pass on to them. Apart from the practical problem of people not really acting on such beliefs, there are also conceptual or philosophical issues that make these obligations problematic. The so-called non-identity problem is especially difficult: depending on which courses of action we adopt, different people will be born in the future, which means that even future peopl…Read more
  •  207
    Ethical Theories and the Transparency Condition
    Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 12 (5): 449-462. 2009.
    Following John Rawls, writers like Bernard Williams and Christine Korsgaard have suggested that a transparency condition should be put on ethical theories. The exact nature of such a condition and its implications is however not anything on which there is any consensus. It is argued here that the ultimate rationale of transparency conditions is epistemic rather than substantively moral, but also that it clearly connects to substantive concerns about moral psychology. Finally, it is argued that o…Read more
  •  123
    Good Lives: Parts and Wholes
    American Philosophical Quarterly 38 (2): 221-231. 2001.
  • Fem fel med utilitarismen
    Norsk Filosofisk Tidsskrift 3. 1999.
  •  292
    Goodness, Values, Reasons
    Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 12 (4): 329-343. 2009.
    Contemporary value theory has been characterized by a renewed interest in the analysis of concepts like "good" or "valuable", the most prominent pattern of analysis in recent years being the socalled buck-passing or fitting-attitude analysis which reduces goodness to a matter of having properties that provide reasons for pro-attitudes. Here I argue that such analyses are best understood as metaphysical rather than linguistic and that while the buck-passing analysis has some virtues, it still fai…Read more
  •  119
    Good-making and organic unity
    Philosophical Studies 174 (6): 1499-1516. 2017.
    Since G. E. Moore introduced his concept of organic unity there has been some discussion of how one should best understand this notion and whether there actually are any organic unities in the Moorean sense. Such discussions do however often put general questions about part-whole relations to the side and tend to focus on interpreting our intuitive responses to possible cases of organic unity. In this paper the focus lies on the part-whole relation in valuable wholes and it is suggested that we …Read more
  •  64
    Evidence-Based Policymaking under Exceptional Circumstances
    In Nils-Eric Sahlin (ed.), Science and Proven Experience, Media-tryck. pp. 29-38. 2021.
  • Deltagarmodellen för preferensutilitarism
    Norsk Filosofisk Tidsskrift 3. 1998.
  •  109
    Rawlsian Constructivism: A Practical Guide to Reflective Equilibrium
    The Journal of Ethics 24 (3): 355-373. 2020.
    Many normative theorists want to contribute to making the world a better place. In recent years, it has been suggested that to realise this ambition one must start with an adequate description of real-life practices. To determine what should be done, however, one must also fundamentally criticise existing moral beliefs. The method of reflective equilibrium offers a way of doing both. Yet, its practical usefulness has been doubted and it has been largely ignored in the recent practical turn of no…Read more
  •  189
    Excellence and means: On the limits of buck-passing
    Journal of Value Inquiry 42 (3): 301-315. 2008.
    The article explores the limits of buck-passing analysis in evaluating value or goodness. It talks about the inability of back-passers to account for two important types of value or goodness, which include excellence and means. The use of delimiting strategy in buck-passing analysis in order to be in possession of goodness is discussed.
  •  125
    Contested Institutional Facts
    Erkenntnis 84 (5): 1047-1064. 2019.
    A significant part of contemporary social ontology has been focused on understanding forms of collective intentionality. It is suggested in this paper that the contested nature of some institutional matters makes this kind of approach problematic, and instead an alternative approach is developed, one that is oriented towards a micro-level analysis of the institutional constraints that we face in everyday life and which can make sense of how there can be institutional facts that are deeply contes…Read more
  • Dygdetik och moraliskt beslutsfattande
    Filosofisk Tidskrift 2. 2008.
  •  135
    Rules and Exceptions
    Theoria 65 (2-3): 127-143. 1999.
    Over the last decades the traditional emphasis on moral rules, or principles, has been attacked by particularists like Jonathan Dancy. I argue that particularists are correct in rejecting traditional attempts at moral codification, but that it is still possible to have a rule-oriented approach to morality if we distinguish between different ways in which features can be morally relevant. I suggest that there are first a limited number of features that can serve as basic moral reasons for action,…Read more
  •  29
  •  93
    Moral Disunitarianism
    Philosophical Quarterly 66 (264): 481-499. 2016.
    This paper puts forward and develops a position called moral disunitarianism, according to which moral generalities, to the extent that they exist, are at best domain-specific. Unlike the particularist, the disunitarian is open to some forms of ethical theorizing, although such theorizing will always have to be specialized and divided into distinct areas, e.g., biomedical ethics, business ethics, the ethics of war (and so on). Two main arguments for disunitarianism are discussed, one starting in…Read more