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569The General Will, the Common Good, and a Democracy of StandardsIn Yiftah Elazar & Geneviève Rousselière (eds.), Republicanism and the Future of Democracy, Cambridge University Press. pp. 13-36. 2019.
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437My Three SelvesPhilosophy 95 (3): 363-389. 2020.Having a self means being able think of myself under a certain profile that that is me: that is who I am, that is how I am. But if I raise the question as to who or how I am, there are three salient profiles in which I can cast myself, three selves with which we can identify. I can see myself just as an agent identified over time by the linkages between my experiences, my attitudes and my actions. I can see myself as the persona that I invite others to rely on and that, if sincere, I internalize…Read more
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82The statePrinceton University Press. 2023.In this work, the prominent political philosopher Philip Pettit embarks on a massive undertaking to offers major new accounts of the foundations of the state and the nature of justice. In doing so Pettit builds a new theory of what the state is and what it ought to be, addresses the normative question of how justice serves as a measure of the success of a state, and the way it should operate in relation to its citizens and other people.
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361On Three Dogmas of NormativityJournal of Applied Philosophy 40 (2): 205-210. 2023.Ruth Chang argues against three dogmas of normativity. Her argument, as least about the first two, is defensible, but defensible on a naturalistic account of normativity that she may not find congenial.
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935Consciousness and the frustrations of physicalismIn Ian Ravenscroft (ed.), Minds, Ethics, and Conditionals: Themes from the Philosophy of Frank Jackson, Oxford University Press. pp. 163. 2009.This chapter sketches what is considered the best interpretation of physicalism, rehearses the best way of defending it, and shows that the physicalism forthcoming is still going to be less than fully satisfying; it is going to leave us short of the satisfaction that might be expected from a philosophical theory. The chapter is organized into three sections. The first section gives an interpretation of physicalism in the spirit of Frank Jackson's; this involves a rich version under which the way…Read more
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Causation in the Philosophy of MindIn Andy Clark & Peter Millican (eds.), Connectionism, Concepts, and Folk Psychology: The Legacy of Alan Turing, Volume 2, Clarendon Press. 1996.
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20Causation in the Philosophy of MindIn Andy Clark & Peter Millican (eds.), Connectionism, Concepts, and Folk Psychology: The Legacy of Alan Turing, Volume II, Clarendon Press. 1999.
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2021The Prisoner's Dilemma and Social Theory: An Overview of Some IssuesPolitics (Currently Australian Journal of Political Science) 20 1-11. 1985.
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2149Program explanation: A general perspectiveAnalysis 50 (2): 107-17. 1990.Some properties are causally relevant for a certain effect, others are not. In this paper we describe a problem for our understanding of this notion and then offer a solution in terms of the notion of a program explanation
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85A hard choice for TomaselloBehavioral and Brain Sciences 43. 2020.Michael Tomasello explains the human sense of obligation by the role it plays in negotiating practices of acting jointly and the commitments they underwrite. He draws in his work on two models of joint action, one from Michael Bratman, the other from Margaret Gilbert. But Bratman's makes the explanation too difficult to succeed, and Gilbert's makes it too easy.
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395Desire Beyond BeliefAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 82 (1): 77-92. 2004.David Lewis [1988; 1996] canvases an anti-Humean thesis about mental states: that the rational agent desires something to the extent that he or she believes it to be good. Lewis offers and refutes a decision-theoretic formulation of it, the 'Desire-as-Belief Thesis'. Other authors have since added further negative results in the spirit of Lewis's. We explore ways of being anti-Humean that evade all these negative results. We begin by providing background on evidential decision theory and on Lewi…Read more
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113Habermas on Truth and JusticeRoyal Institute of Philosophy Lecture Series 14 207-228. 1982.The problem which motivates this paper bears on the relationship between Marxism and morality. It is not the well-established question of whether the Marxist's commitments undermine an attachment to ethical standards, but the more neglected query as to whether they allow the espousal of political ideals. The study and assessment of political ideals is pursued nowadays under the title of theory of justice, the aim of such theory being to provide a criterion for distinguishing just patterns of soc…Read more
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1Rationality, Reasoning and Group AgencyIn Graham Macdonald & Cynthia Macdonald (eds.), Emergence in mind, Oxford University Press. 2010.
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886Preserving Republican Freedom: A Reply to SimpsonPhilosophy and Public Affairs 46 (4): 363-383. 2018.Philosophy &Public Affairs, Volume 46, Issue 4, Page 363-383, Fall 2018.
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76Husserl and Phenomenology, by Edo PivčevićJournal of the British Society for Phenomenology 2 (1): 95-97. 1971.
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75Readings in Existential Phenomenology, edited by Nathaniel Lawrence and Daniel O'ConnorJournal of the British Society for Phenomenology 1 (1): 95-96. 1970.
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67Explanation in the Behavioural Sciences: Confrontations.Edited by Robert Borger and Frank CioffiJournal of the British Society for Phenomenology 4 (3): 278-281. 1973.
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964The Republican Law of Peoples: A RestatementIn Barbara Buckinx, Jonathan Trejo-Mathys & Timothy Waligore (eds.), Domination and Global Political Justice: Conceptual, Historical and Institutional Perspectives, Routledge. 2014.
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1016Democracy Before, In, and After SchumpeterCritical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 29 (4): 492-504. 2017.The classical model of democracy that Schumpeter criticizes is manufactured out of a variety of earlier ideas, not those of any one thinker or even one school of thought. His critique of the central ideals by which he defines the model--those of the common will and the common good--remains persuasive. People's preferences are too messy and too manipulable to allow us to think that mass democracy can promote those ideals, as he defines them. Should we endorse his purely electoral model of democra…Read more
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862A question for tomorrow: The robust demands of the goodLes Ateliers de L’Ethique 7 (3): 7-12. 2007.
Princeton, New Jersey, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Normative Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |