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99Justice and ResponsibilityCanadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence 17 (2): 361-386. 2004.I argue that institutions charged with giving justice must understand responsibility in terms of norms governing what people are entitled to expect of each other. On this conception, the sort of responsibility that is of interest to private law or distributive justice is not a relation between a person and the consequence, but rather a relation between persons with respect to consequences. As a result, nonrelational facts about a person’s actions and the circumstances in which she performs them …Read more
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1Richard W. Miller, Moral Differences: Truth, Justice and Conscience in a World of Conflict Reviewed byPhilosophy in Review 13 (3): 111-113. 1993.
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117Form and Matter in Kantian Political Philosophy: A ReplyEuropean Journal of Philosophy 20 (3): 487-496. 2012.This paper responds briefly to four reviews of Force and Freedom. Valentini and Sangiovanni criticize what they see as the excessive formalism of the Kantian enterprise, contending that the Kantian project is circular, because it defines rights and freedom together, and that this circularity renders it unable to say anything determinate about appropriate restrictions and permissions. I show that the appearance of circularity arises from a misconstrual of the Kantian idea of a right. Properly und…Read more
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21Rationality and AlienationCanadian Journal of Philosophy, Supplementary Volume 15 (n/a): 449-466. 1989.Two decades ago, problems of alienation and fetishism were the focus of most English speaking studies of Marx’s philosophy. More recent work on Marx and Marxist themes has tended to avoid these questions in favor of discussions of explanation, exploitation, distributive justice and problems of class formation and co-ordination. The latter set of problems seem more readily addressable, if not always more tractable, using contemporary tools drawn from the philosophy of science, as well as methods …Read more
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276Critical notice too much invested to quitEconomics and Philosophy 20 (1): 185-208. 2004.Faculty of Law and Department of Philosophy, University of Toronto 1. INTRODUCTION The economic analysis of law has gone through a remarkable change in the past decade and a half. The founding articles of the discipline – such classic pieces as Ronald Coase’s “The problem of social cost” (1960), Richard Posner’s “A theory of negligence” (1972) and Guido Calabresi and Douglas Malamed’s “Property rules, liability rules, and inalienability: One view of the cathedral” (1972) – offered economic analy…Read more
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708. Public Right II: Roads to FreedomIn Force and freedom: Kant's legal and political philosophy, Harvard University Press. pp. 232-266. 2009.
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2833Authority and CoercionPhilosophy and Public Affairs 32 (1): 2-35. 2004.I am grateful to Donald Ainslie, Lisa Austin, Michael Blake, Abraham Drassinower, David Dyzenhaus, George Fletcher, Robert Gibbs, Louis-Philippe Hodgson, Sari Kisilevsky, Dennis Klimchuk, Christopher Morris, Scott Shapiro, Horacio Spector, Sergio Tenenbaum, Malcolm Thorburn, Ernest Weinrib, Karen Weisman, and the Editors of Philosophy & Public Affairs for comments, and audiences in the UCLA Philosophy Department and Columbia Law School for their questions.
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90Making the World Safe for LiberalismDialogue 32 (2): 309-. 1993.‘Liberal’ is still a term of abuse in US presidential politics and certain academic circles. But gone for now are the days when liberals were saddled with responsibility for (depending on who was making the accusation) crime, promiscuity or crass concern with material wealth. Instead, competing political visions increasingly do battle for the right to carry the liberal banner.
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101Wise Choices, Apt Feelings: A Theory of Normative JudgmentPhilosophical Review 101 (4): 934. 1992.
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11Kant and the circumstances of justiceIn Elisabeth Ellis (ed.), Kant's Political Theory: Interpretations and Applications, Pennsylvania State University Press. 2012.
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160Three duties to rescue: Moral, civil, and criminal (review)Law and Philosophy 19 (6): 751-779. 2000.No Abstract
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56IndexIn Force and freedom: Kant's legal and political philosophy, Harvard University Press. pp. 389-399. 2009.
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4Equality, Responsibility, and the LawCambridge University Press. 1998.This book examines responsibility and luck as these issues arise in tort law, criminal law, and distributive justice. The central question is: whose bad luck is a particular piece of misfortune? Arthur Ripstein argues that there is a general set of principles to be found that clarifies responsibility in those cases where luck is most obviously an issue: accidents, mistakes, emergencies, and failed attempts at crime. In revealing how the problems that arise in tort and criminal law as well as dis…Read more
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Phl 370s Issues in the Philosophy of LawCustom Publishing Service, University of Toronto Bookstores. 1999.
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227Commodity FetishismCanadian Journal of Philosophy 17 (4). 1987.Criticism and sarcasm are interspersed with description and analysis throughout Marx's work. Most of the criticism is aimed at one or another side of a single target: what Marx sees as capitalism's pretensions of freedom, equality, and prosperity in the face of exploitation and recurrent crises. But the remarks on commodity fetishism in the first volume of Capital seem to be directed at a different target. Here Marx tells us that a commodity is ‘a queer thing, abounding in metaphysical subtletie…Read more
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534. Private Right II: PropertyIn Force and freedom: Kant's legal and political philosophy, Harvard University Press. pp. 86-106. 2009.
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96Strictly Speaking—It Went Without SayingLegal Theory 2 (1): 63-81. 1996.Herbert Simon once observed that watching an ant make its way across the uneven surface of a beach, one can easily be impressed—too impressed—with the foresight and complexity of the ant's internal map of the beach. Simon went on to point out that such an attribution of complexity to the ant makes a serious mistake. Most of the complexity is not in the ant but in the beach. The ant is just complex enough to use the features of the beach to find its way.
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67Liberal Justification and the Limits of NeutralityAnalyse & Kritik 14 (1): 3-17. 1992.This paper examines a style of political justification prominent in contemporary liberalism, according to which policies are legitimate only if they can be shown to be acceptable to all. Although this approach is often associated with neutrality about the good life, it is argued that liberalism cannot be neutral about questions of the role of various goods, such as work, play and community. The paper closes by exploring the implications and applicability of this account of justification to conte…Read more
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84The Jurisprudence Annual Lecture 2015—Means and EndsJurisprudence 6 (1): 1-23. 2015.Legal doctrine often focuses on means rather than ends. In an action for breach of contract, the court asks only whether promisor performed as promised, and takes no account of what either promisor or promisee expected to gain by the transaction. The criminal law inquires into how the criminal was trying to accomplish some purpose, not what the purpose was. Most crimes are committed to get money, a purpose of which the law otherwise approves. This focus on means is often said to be superficial, …Read more