•  98
    Théories Économiques de la Justice, Marc FleurbaeyModern Theories of Justice, Serge-Christophe KolmTheories of Distributive Justice, John Roemer.
  •  53
    Book Reviews (review)
    Mind 104 (415): 622-624. 1995.
  • John Howie, ed., Ethical Principles and Practice (review)
    Philosophy in Review 9 416-417. 1989.
  •  53
    Review of Dale F. Murray, Nozick, Autonomy and Compensation (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2007 (12). 2007.
    In this nicely written book, Dale Murray critically discusses the moral rights posited by Robert Nozick in Anarchy, State, and Utopia. His focus is on these rights and not on Nozick's arguments about the justness of the state. He argues that Nozick's rights to compensation give rise to rights to government-financed health care and that Nozick should recognize a natural right to enough goods to ensure a reasonable chance of living a decent and meaningful life (if feasible for all). Murray also di…Read more
  •  20
    Book-Reviews (review)
    Mind 100 (397): 139-142. 1991.
  •  83
    How to combine pareto optimality with liberty considerations
    Theory and Decision 27 (3): 217-240. 1989.
    I argue that the liberty condition of Sen's important impossibility of a Paretian liberal result is not a condition that liberals (or libertarians) would accept. The problem is that an appropriate liberty condition must be formulated in terms of consent - not in terms of preference. To formulate an adequate condition the framework needs to expand from collective choice rules (which only take information about preferences as input) to rights-based social choice rules (which also take as input inf…Read more
  •  948
    Paretian egalitarianism with variable population size
    with Bertil Tungodden
    In John Roemer & Kotaro Suzumura (eds.), Intergenerational Equity and Sustainability, Palgrave Publishers. 2007.
    in Intergenerational Equity and Sustainability, edited by John Roemer and Kotaro Suzumura, (Palgrave Publishers Ltd., forthcoming 2007), ch.11.
  •  72
    Oxford Studies in Political Philosophy: Volume 1 (edited book)
    Oxford University Press UK. 2015.
    This is the inaugural volume of Oxford Studies in Political Philosophy. Since its revival in the 1970s political philosophy has been a vibrant field in philosophy, one that intersects with jurisprudence, normative economics, political theory in political science departments, and just war theory. OSPP aims to publish some of the best contemporary work in political philosophy and these closely related subfields.
  •  57
    What We Owe to Each Other (review)
    International Philosophical Quarterly 40 (1): 102-103. 2000.
  •  8
    No Title available: Book Reviews (review)
    Utilitas 15 (1): 112-113. 2003.
  •  241
    Utilitarianism and infinite utility
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 71 (2). 1993.
    Traditional act utilitarianism judges an action permissible just in case it produces as much aggregate utility as any alternative. It is often supposed that utilitarianism faces a serious problem if the future is infinitely long. For in that case, actions may produce an infinite amount of utility. And if that is so for most actions, then utilitarianism, it appears, loses most of its power to discriminate among actions. For, if most actions produce an infinite amount of utility, then few actions …Read more
  •  383
    Explicating lawhood
    Philosophy of Science 55 (4): 598-613. 1988.
    D. M. Armstrong, Michael Tooley, and Fred Dretske have recently proposed a new realist account of laws of nature, according to which laws of nature are objective relations between universals. After criticizing this account, I develop an alternative realist account, according to which (1) the nomic structure of a world is a relation between initial world-histories and world-histories, and (2) a law of nature is a fact that holds solely in virtue of nomic structure (and not, for example, in virtue…Read more
  •  32
    Teaching Nonphilosophy Faculty to Teach Critical Thinking about Ethical Issues
    with John Accordino
    Teaching Philosophy 22 (3): 249-257. 1999.
    As demand from fields such as nursing and accounting elevate the need for critical thinking courses, philosophers are in a unique position to share their skills in teaching such courses with nonphilosophy faculty. This paper discusses the need for critical thinking courses outside of philosophy and why philosophers should be interested in training nonphilosophy faculty. After basic course design information is offered for nonphilosopher readers, guidelines are offered on how philosophy teachers …Read more
  •  61
    Critical Notice (review)
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 18 (3): 595-607. 1988.
  •  12
    Left libertarianism is a theory of justice that is committed to full self-ownership and to an egalitarian sharing of the value of natural resources. It is, I shall suggest, a promising way of capturing the liberal egalitarian values of liberty, security, equality, and prosperity.
  •  248
    Critical Notice of G.A. Cohen’s Self-Ownership, Freedom, and Equality (review)
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 28 (4): 609-626. 1998.
    G.A. Cohen’s book brings together and elaborates on articles that he has written on selfownership, on Marx’s theory of exploitation, and on the future of socialism. Although seven of the eleven chapters have been previously published (1977-1992), this is not merely a collection of articles. There is a superb introduction that gives an overview of how the chapters fit together and of their historical relation to each other. Most chapters have a new introduction and often a postscript or addendum …Read more
  •  169
    Broome on Moral Goodness and Population Ethics
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 78 (3). 2009.
    and Overview In an earlier book, Weighing Goods1, John Broome gave a sophisticated defense of utilitarianism for the cases involving a fixed population. In the present book, Weighing Lives, he extends this defense to variable population cases, where different individuals exist depending on which choice is made. Broome defends a version of utilitarianism according to which there is a vague positive level of individual wellbeing such that adding a life with more than that level of wellbeing makes …Read more
  •  129
    Infinite utility: Anonymity and person-centredness
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 73 (3). 1995.
    In 1991 Mark Nelson argued that if time is infinitely long towards the future, then under certain easily met conditions traditional utilitarianism is unable to discriminate among actions. For under these conditions, each action produces the same infinite amount of utility, and thus it seems that utilitarianism must judge all actions permissible, judge all actions impermissible, or remain completely silent. In response to this criticism of utilitarianism, I argued that utilitarianism had the r…Read more
  •  2009
    Left-Libertarianism
    In David Estlund (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Political Philosophy, Oxford University Press Usa. pp. 152. 2012.
  •  990
    Responsibility and False Beliefs
    In Carl Knight & Zofia Stemploska (eds.), Justice and Responsibility, Oxford University Press. 2011.
    An individual is agent-responsible for an outcome just in case it flows from her autonomous agency in the right kind of way. The topic of agent-responsibility is important because most people believe that agents should be held morally accountable (e.g., liable to punishment or having an obligation to compensate victims) for outcomes for which they are agent-responsible and because many other people (e.g., brute luck egalitarians) hold that agents should not be held accountable for outcomes for w…Read more
  •  1261
    Against maximizing act-consequentialism (june 30, 2008)
    In James Dreier (ed.), Contemporary Debates in Moral Theory, Wiley-blackwell. pp. 6--21. 2008.
    Maximizing act consequentialism holds that actions are morally permissible if and only if they maximize the value of consequences—if and only if, that is, no alternative action in the given choice situation has more valuable consequences.[i] It is subject to two main objections. One is that it fails to recognize that morality imposes certain constraints on how we may promote value. Maximizing act consequentialism fails to recognize, I shall argue, that the ends do not always justify the means. A…Read more
  •  133
    The connection between prudential and moral goodness
    Journal of Social Philosophy 24 (2): 105-128. 1993.
    The basic idea of the theorem is not very new: it is a slight generalization of a theorem proved by John Harsanyi in the 1950s.[i] The power of the book comes from his interpretation of the theorem, and from his strikingly clear and insightful discussion of the various conditions.
  •  589
    Who are the least advantaged?
    with Bertil Tungodden
    In Nils Holtug & Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen (eds.), Egalitarianism: new essays on the nature and value of equality, Clarendon Press. pp. 174--95. 2007.
    The difference principle, introduced by Rawls (1971, 1993), is generally interpreted as leximin, but this is not how he intended it. Rawls explicitly states that the difference principle requires that aggregate benefits (e.g., average or total) to those in the least advantaged group be given lexical priority over benefits to others, where the least advantaged group includes more than the strictly worst off individuals. We study the implications of adopting different approaches to the definition …Read more
  •  92
    In a narrow sense, hate speech is symbolic representation that expresses, hatred, contempt, or disregard for another person or group of persons. The use of deeply insulting racial or ethnic epithets is an example of such hate speech. In a broader sense, hate speech also includes the symbolic representation of views are deeply offensive to others. The expression of the view that women are morally inferior to (or less intelligent than) men is example of hate speech in the broader sense. The questi…Read more