•  88
    A Hegel Dictionary (review)
    Cogito 7 (2): 159-159. 1993.
  •  100
    Rousseau and ethics
    In Jed Z. Buchwald & Robert Fox (eds.), The Oxford handbook of the history of physics, Oxford University Press. 2013.
    This chapter demonstrates that Rousseau sets out no systematic moral theory of his own but rather a series of theories about other matters which contain remarks and opinions relevant to ethics, beginning with a discussion of his theory of psychological development. It then explores a number of possible answers to the questions: what, according to Rousseau is morality, and why should we be moral? Next, the chapter explains the meaning of Rousseau's natural goodness thesis. It presents two main ac…Read more
  •  238
    Jean Jacques Rousseau
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. forthcoming.
    Jean-Jacques Rousseau remains an important figure in the history of philosophy, both because of his contributions to political philosophy and moral psychology and because of his influence on later thinkers. Rousseau's own view of philosophy and philosophers was firmly negative, seeing philosophers as the post-hoc rationalizers of self-interest, as apologists for various forms of tyranny, and as playing a role in the alienation of the modern individual from humanity's natural impulse to compassio…Read more
  •  94
    Competing methods of territorial control, migration and justice
    Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 17 (1): 129-143. 2014.
    No abstract.
  •  86
    The Ethics of Immigration, by Joseph Carens
    Mind 125 (498): 575-578. 2016.
  •  141
    Property in the Moral Life of Human Beings
    Social Philosophy and Policy 30 (1-2): 404-424. 2013.
    Liberal egalitarian political philosophers have often argued that private property is a legal convention dependent on the state and that complaints about taxation from entitlement theorists are therefore based on a conceptual mistake. But our capacity to grasp and use property concepts seems too embedded in human nature for this to be correct. This essay argues that many standard arguments that property is constitutively a legal convention fail, but that the opposition between conventionalists a…Read more
  •  2
    Global justice, moral development, and democracy
    In Gillian Brock & Harry Brighouse (eds.), The Political Philosophy of Cosmopolitanism, Cambridge University Press. 2005.
  •  141
    Analytical Marxism: A Critique
    Historical Materialism 3 (1): 235-241. 1998.
  •  11
    Rousseau and 'The Social Contract'
    Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 66 (3): 599-599. 2004.
  •  92
    Liberté et egalité
    The Philosophers' Magazine 28 91-91. 2004.
  •  174
    Justifications for state authority are typically directed towards the good of those subject to that authority. But, because of their territorial nature, states exercise coercion not only towards insiders but also towards non-members. Such coercion can take the form of denying outsiders the right to enter a territory or to settle in it permanently, as well as various restraints on trade and association. When coercion is directed at insiders, it often comes packaged with various claims about distri…Read more