•  95
  • Om rationalitet
    Norsk Filosofisk Tidsskrift 2. 1997.
  •  45
    Quine's Nihilism
    Ratio 15 (2): 205-219. 2002.
    Quine is an important philosopher. The point of departure of his philosophical enterprise is sound: his down to earth naturalism, his scientism and behaviourism. However, he tends to get carried away by it, when he goes to extremes – and ends up in nihilism. It is certainly true that we can never quite rule out the possibility that we have misunderstood another person. And what he or she means is a consequence mainly of two things. It is a consequence of his actual intention with the utterance a…Read more
  • Book Review-//Coercive Care: The Ethics of Choice in Health and Medicine (review)
    with Heta Aleksandra Gylling
    Bioethics 16 (1): 84-86. 2002.
  •  84
    Is Our Admiration for Sports Heroes Fascistoid?
    Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 25 (1): 23-34. 1998.
    No abstract
  •  62
  • En riktig hårding
    Norsk Filosofisk Tidsskrift 4 (2): 37. 1983.
  •  44
    The case of biobank with the law: between a legal and scientific fiction
    with Judit Sándor, Petra Bárd, and Claudio Tamburrini
    Journal of Medical Ethics 38 (6): 347-350. 2012.
    According to estimates more than 400 biobanks currently operate across Europe. The term ‘biobank’ indicates a specific field of genetic study that has quietly developed without any significant critical reflection across European societies. Although scientists now routinely use this phrase, the wider public is still confused when the word ‘bank’ is being connected with the collection of their biological samples. There is a striking lack of knowledge of this field. In the recent Eurobarometer surv…Read more
  •  31
    Context-Dependent Preferences and the Right to Forgo Life-Saving Treatments
    Social Theory and Practice 41 (4): 716-733. 2015.
    A member of Jehovah’s Witnesses agreed to receive blood when alone, but rejected it once the elders were present. She insisted that the elders should stay, they were allowed to do so, and she bled to death. Was it all right to allow her to have the elders present when she made her final decision? Was it all right to allow her to bleed to death? It was, according to an anti-paternalist principle, which I have earlier defended on purely utilitarian grounds. The thrust of the present argument is th…Read more
  •  38
    The Expressivist Theory of Truth
    Theoria 66 (3): 256-272. 2000.
    The expressivist theory of truth (TETT) is stated and defended. According to TETT, to state such things as that it is true that snow is white is to express one's assent to the proposition that snow is white. In contexts where we refer to propositions with the aid of definite descriptions (“What Peter said”) or quantify over them (“Everything Peter says”), in order to say that they are “true”, the word “true” is essential, however. But it does not stand for any genuine property. According to TETT…Read more
  •  338
    Why We Ought to Accept the Repugnant Conclusion
    Utilitas 14 (3): 339. 2002.
    Derek Parfit has famously pointed out that ‘total’ utilitarian views, such as classical hedonistic utilitarianism, lead to the conclusion that, to each population of quite happy persons there corresponds a more extensive population with people living lives just worth living, which is better. In particular, for any possible population of at least ten billion people, all with a very high quality of life, there must be some much larger imaginable population whose existence, if other things are equa…Read more
  •  27
    Against liberty
    Journal of Value Inquiry 18 (2): 83-97. 1984.
    There are no private particular actions that should be altogether free of social interference. No absolute distinction can be made between types of actions affecting others and those affecting only the agent. Relative to a purpose in formulating an act of law, for instance, such a distinction can, however, be made. The idea of social freedom could therefore be thought to imply that even if there are no absolutely private particular actions, and even if society could interfere for any purpose to …Read more
  • Replik om terrorismen
    Norsk Filosofisk Tidsskrift 2 (4): 41. 1981.
  •  41
    Our right to in vitro fertilisation--its scope and limits
    Journal of Medical Ethics 34 (11): 802-806. 2008.
    There exists a derived negative right to procreative freedom, including a right to in vitro fertilisation (IVF) and to the exercise of selective techniques such as preimplantation genetic diagnosis. This is an extensive freedom, including not only the right to the exercise of a responsible parenthood, but also, in rare cases, to wrong decisions. It includes also a right for less than perfect parents to the use of IVF, and for IVF doctors to assist them, if they want and can agree about the terms
  •  287
    Moral Relativism
    Philosophical Studies 135 (2): 123-143. 2007.
    Moral relativism comes in many varieties. One is a moral doctrine, according to which we ought to respect other cultures, and allow them to solve moral problems as they see fit. I will say nothing about this kind of moral relativism in the present context. Another kind of moral relativism is semantic moral relativism, according to which, when we pass moral judgements, we make an implicit reference to some system of morality (our own). According to this kind of moral relativism, when I say that a…Read more
  •  173
    The repugnant conclusion is acceptable from the point of view of total utilitarianism. Total utilitarians do not seem to be bothered with it. They feel that it is in no way repugnant. To me, a hard-nosed total utilitarian, this settles the case. However, if, sometimes, I doubt that total utilitarianism has the final say in ethics, and tend to think that there may be something to some objection to it or another, it is the objection to it brought forward from egalitarian thought that first comes t…Read more
  •  256
    Against Sexual Discrimination in Sports
    In William J. Morgan (ed.), Ethics in Sport, Human Kinetics. pp. 347. 2007.
  •  28
    This article discusses under what circumstances patients who are suffering from senile dementia or mental retardation should be submitted to coercive care, who should decide about this kind of coercion, and in what legal framework it should take place. A distinction is drawn between modest (i.e. of moderate degree) and meddlesome coercion. The use of modest coercion is defended. It is argued that medical personnel ought to decide exclusively about the use of modest coercion. However, no law shou…Read more
  •  1
    Varför inte dödstraff?
    Norsk Filosofisk Tidsskrift 4. 1997.
  • Död och teletransport
    Norsk Filosofisk Tidsskrift 10 (2): 1. 1989.
  •  66
    The moral significance of moral realism
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 26 (2): 247-261. 1988.
    Moral realism does not imply any interesting moral statements. However, There are pragmatic consequences of our acceptance of moral realism. If we accept moral realism we have good reasons to be concerned about moral arguments, And we are able to account for moral fallibility. If, On the other hand, We accept moral irrealism, A concern for moral arguments and moral consistency seems completely arbitrary, And we have difficulties to account for moral fallibility. We may even come to think, When a…Read more
  •  82
    Hedonistic Utilitarianism
    with Earl Conee
    Philosophical Review 110 (3): 428. 1998.
    This is a wide-ranging defense of a distinctive version of hedonistic act utilitarianism. It is plainly written, forthright, and stimulating. Also, it is replete with disputable assertions and arguments. I shall pursue one issue here, after sketching the project of each substantial chapter.
  •  42
    According to a recent convention on human rights and biomedicine, coercive treatment of psychiatric patients may only be given if, without such treatment, serious harm is likely to result to the health of the patient; it must not be given in the interest of other people. In the present article a discussion is undertaken about the implication of this stipulation for the use of coercion in psychiatry in general and in forensic psychiatry in particular
  •  26
  • Sociobiologi
    Norsk Filosofisk Tidsskrift 5 (1): 22. 1984.
  •  51
    Utilitarianism and informed consent
    Journal of Medical Ethics 40 (7): 445-445. 2014.
    Being targeted by Nir Eyal's ingenious argument,1 I am pleased to have the opportunity to respond. It is fairly obvious that my utilitarian argument accomplishes what it is supposed to accomplish, namely a defence of the idea that the notion of informed consent should take roughly the form it takes in Western medicine. But does it fly in the face of commonsense moral thinking? I will argue that it does not.My argument is based on hedonistic utilitarianism.2 This means that it is an instance of t…Read more
  • Coercive Care asks probing and challenging questions regarding the use of coercion in health care and the social services. The book combines philosophical analysis with comparative studies of social policy and law in a large number of industrialized countries