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100The Dualism of the Practical Reason: Some Interpretations and ResponsesEtica and Politica / Ethics and Politics 10 (2): 19-41. 2008.Sidgwick’s dualism of the practical reason is the idea that since egoism and utilitarianism aim both to have rational supremacy in our practical decisions, whenever they conflict there is no stronger reason to follow the dictates of either view. The dualism leaves us with a practical problem: in conflict cases, we cannot be guided by practical reason to decide what all things considered we ought to do. There is an epistemic problem as well: the conflict of egoism and utilitarianism shows that th…Read more
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143How to Be a Friend of Absolute GoodnessPhilosophia 41 (4): 1237-1251. 2013.This paper critically examines Richard Kraut’s attack on the notion of absolute value, and lays out some of the conceptual work required to defend such a notion. The view under attack claims that absolute goodness is a property that provides a reason to value what has it. Kraut’s overall challenge is that absolute goodness cannot play this role. Kraut’s own view is that goodness-for, instead, plays the reason-providing role. My targets are Kraut’s double-counting objection, and his ethical objec…Read more
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183Obligations of NearnessJournal of Value Inquiry 42 (1): 1-21. 2008.Frances Kamm argues that physical distance is per se relevant to our duty to give aid to strangers.
Her methods, however, fail to bring into light the relevance per se of distance. To understand the claim that
distance is per se morally relevant, it is helpful to use distinctions devised by Jonathan Dancy among
different roles a feature may play in the explanation of moral reasons, yielding thus different senses of
relevance. A feature can directly count in favor of an action, enable another feature…Read more -
243What’s wrong with Moorean buck-passing?Philosophical Studies 164 (3): 727-746. 2013.In this paper I discuss and try to remove some major stumbling blocks for a Moorean buck-passing account of reasons in terms of value (MBP): There is a pro tanto reason to favour X if and only if X is intrinsically good, or X is instrumentally good, or favouring X is intrinsically good, or favouring X is instrumentally good. I suggest that MBP can embrace and explain the buck-passing intuition behind the far more popular buck-passing account of value, and has the means to avoid the wrong kind of…Read more
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1063The Guise of the GoodPhilosophy Compass 10 (10): 714-724. 2015.According to the doctrine of the guise of the good, all that is desired is seen by the subject as good to some extent. As a claim about action, the idea is that intentional action, or acting for a reason, is action that is seen as good by the agent. I explore the thesis' main attractions: it provides an account of intentional behavior as something that makes sense to the agent, it paves the way for various views in meta-ethics and normative ethics, and it offers a unified account of practical an…Read more
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61Iwao Hirose and Andrew Reisner : Weighing and Reasoning. Themes from the Philosophy of John Broome: Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015, 255 pp., Hardback, € 62,99 (review)Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 19 (3): 805-807. 2016.