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103Review of Raymond Geuss, Philosophy and Real Politics (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (1). 2009.
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71Proportionality and necessityIn Larry May (ed.), War: Essays in Political Philosophy, Cambridge University Press. 2008.to appear in Larry May, ed., War and Political Philosophy (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).
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191The Three Faces of FlourishingSocial Philosophy and Policy 16 (1): 44. 1999.To my knowledge, the term “flourishing” was introduced into contemporary philosophy in Elizabeth Anscombe's 1958 article “Modern Moral Philosophy.” In this article and in much of the writing subsequent to it, the concept of flourishing seems to have three principal facets, or to be associated with three philosophical views
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202Asymmetries In ValueNoûs 44 (2): 199-223. 2010.Values typically come in pairs. Most obviously, there are the pairs of an intrinsic good and its contrasting intrinsic evil, such as pleasure and pain, virtue and vice, and desert and undesert, or getting what one deserves and getting its opposite. But in more complex cases there can be contrasting pairs with the same value. Thus, virtue has the positive form of benevolent pleasure in another’s pleasure and the negative form of compassionate pain for his pain, while desert has the positive form …Read more
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58Making Sense of Human Rights: Philosophical Reflections on the Universal Declaration of Human RightsPhilosophical Books 30 (1): 54-56. 1987.
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180Liability and Just CauseEthics and International Affairs 21 (2): 199-218. 2007.This paper is a response to Jeff McMahan's "Just Cause for War". It defends a more permissive, and more traditional view of just war liability against McMahan's claims.
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32Though primarily focussed on philosophy of language, metaphysics, and epistemology, Scott Soames’s Philosophical Analysis in the Twentieth Century contains several discussions of ethics. Volume 1 contains two chapters on Moore’s ethics, one on the emotivism of Ayer and Stevenson, and one on Ross; Volume 2 adds a chapter on Hare’s prescriptivism. The bulk of the Moore chapters as well as the ones on emotivism and Hare concern metaethics, but there is also discussion of Moore’s normative views and…Read more
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Common Themes from Sidgwick to EwingIn Underivative Duty: British Moral Philosophers from Sidgwick to Ewing, Oxford University Press. 2011.
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146Rights and Capital PunishmentDialogue 21 (4): 647-660. 1982.Discussions of the morality of capital punishment, and indeed discussions of the morality of punishment in general, usually assume that there are two possible justifications of punishment, a deterrence justification associated with utilitarianism and other consequentialist moral theories, and a retributive justification associated with deontological moral theories. But now that rights-based theories are attracting the increasing attention of moral philosophers it is worth asking whether these th…Read more
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396Value and friendship: A more subtle viewUtilitas 18 (3): 232-242. 2006.T. M. Scanlon has cited the value of friendship in arguing against a ‘teleological’ view of value which says that value inheres only in states of affairs and demands only that we promote it. This article argues that, whatever the teleological view's final merits, the case against it cannot be made on the basis of friendship. The view can capture Scanlon's claims about friendship if it holds, as it can consistently with its basic ideas, that (i) friendship is a higher-level good consisting in app…Read more
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1Book Review: Sher, Beyond Neutrality (review)In Stephen Everson (ed.), Ethics: Companions to Ancient Thought, Vol. 4, Cambridge University Press. pp. 109--190. 1998.
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59I became interested in normative ethics in my last term as a philosophy undergraduate at the University of Toronto. Influenced by a traditional conception of the discipline, I’d till then studied mostly history of philosophy, with a special interest in, of all things, Hegel. But seeing the value of a balanced philosophy program, I enrolled in an ethics seminar in the winter of 1975. I’d studied the ethics of Plato, Leibniz, Hegel, and others in my history courses, but this was my first exposure …Read more
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129The Rejection of Consequentialism Samuel Scheffler Don Mills: Oxford University Press, 1982. Pp. viii, 129Dialogue 23 (1): 165-167. 1984.
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323Moore in the middleEthics 113 (3): 599-628. 2003.The rhetoric of Principia Ethica, as of not a few philosophy books, is that of the clean break. Moore claims that the vast majority of previous writing on ethics has been misguided and that an entirely new start is needed. In its time, however, the book’s claims to novelty were widely disputed. Reviews in Mind, Ethics, and The Journal of Philosophy applauded the clarity of Moore’s criticisms of Mill, Spencer, and others, but said they were “not altogether original,” had for the most part “alread…Read more
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142George Sher, Beyond Neutrality: Perfectionism and Politics:Beyond Neutrality: Perfectionism and PoliticsEthics 109 (1): 187-190. 1998.
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74Five questions about normative ethicsIn Jesper Ryberg & Thomas S. Peterson (eds.), Normative Ethics: Five Questions, Automatic Press/vip. 2007.in Thomas S. Petersen and Jesper Ryberg, eds., Normative Ethics: 5 Questions.
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111Self-Interest, Altruism, and VirtueSocial Philosophy and Policy 14 (1): 286. 1997.My topic in this essay is the comparative moral value of self-interest and altruism. I take self-interest to consist in a positive attitude toward one's own good and altruism to consist in a similar attitude toward the good of others, and I assess these attitudes within a general theory of the intrinsic value of attitudes toward goods and evils. The first two sections of the essay apply this theory in a simple form, one that treats self-interest and altruism symmetrically. The third section exam…Read more
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254Value theoryIn David Copp (ed.), The Oxford handbook of ethical theory, Oxford University Press. pp. 357--379. 2006.This chapter surveys a variety of views about which states of affairs are intrinsically good, that is, in themselves or apart from their consequences. It considers the claims to intrinsic value of such states of individuals as pleasure, the fulfillment of desire, knowledge, achievement, moral virtue, and personal relationships; the different ways such goods can be compared and aggregated both within and across individual lives; and the possibility, given a principle of “organic unities,” of good…Read more
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355The Well-Rounded LifeJournal of Philosophy 84 (12): 727-46. 1987.This paper discusses the idea, which arises within perfectionist theories of the good, that there can be special value in a well-rounded life, one that contains a balance of different intrinsic goods, e.g. knowledge and achievement, rather than specializing narrowly on just one. It uses the economists' device of indifference graphs to 1) formulate the view the well-roundedness is other things equal a good, and 2) to combine that view with empirical theses about the (at times) instrumental benefi…Read more
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Areas of Interest
| Normative Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |
| 20th Century Philosophy |