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64Morals and MarxDialogue 22 (3): 523-534. 1983.There are fourteen original papers in this substantial volume devoted to the general problem of the relation of Marxism, or at least Marxism as found in the works of Marx, and moral theory. The questions are, in Nielsen's words, “whether there should be or even could be a Marxist moral theory and if there could be a Marxist moral theory, what sort of a moral theory it should be”. Why does he not include the question what Marx's moral theory is? For a few of these writers do think that Marx had s…Read more
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315Utilitarianism and formalismAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 43 (1): 58-72. 1965.No abstract
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63Discussion of Helga Varden’s Review and Alistair MacLeod’s CommentsSocial Philosophy Today 27 179-196. 2011.
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65The Evaluation of Ethical Theories. By Charles B. Daniels. Halifax, Dalhousie University Press 1975. pp. 87 + viii. $3.00 (review)Dialogue 19 (2): 349-359. 1980.
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91Kerrey and CalleyInternational Journal of Applied Philosophy 16 (2): 153-162. 2002.In the Vietnam war, Lieutenant Calley, claiming to be following orders, ordered the killing of several hundred women, children, and elderly people in the village of My Lai. In 1969, Lieutenant (later Senator) Kerrey led a small group of SEALs in the dead of night on a dangerous military venture. In course, a dozen or so innocent villagers were either shot in crossfire or killed intentionally because there seemed a real chance that they would inform the enemy, endangering themselves and the missi…Read more
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Classical vs. Modern Liberalism: Advantage, Classical'In Sirkku Hellsten, Marjaana Kopperi & Olli Loukola (eds.), Taking the Liberal Challenge Seriously: Essays on Contemporary Liberalism at the Turn of the 21st Century, Ashgate. pp. 9. 1997.
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1John Christman, The Myth of Property , pp. ix + 184, + Notes, Bibliography, Index (review)Reason Papers 21 77-81. 1996.
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236On a Case for Animal RightsThe Monist 70 (1): 31-49. 1987.Down through the past decade and more, no philosophical writer has taken a greater interest in the issues of how we ought to act in relation to animals, nor pressed more strongly the case for according them rights, than Tom Regan, in many articles, reviews, and exchanges at scholarly conferences and in print. Now, in The Case for Animal Rights we have a substantial volume in which Regan most fully and systematically presents his case for a strong panoply of rights for animals. The argument is di…Read more
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132InequalityPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 56 (2): 482-485. 1996.This book investigates the idea of inequality. According to the author, it does not address the question whether one should care about inequality nor which version is more plausible. Instead, its purpose is “to understand egalitarianism”, to “elucidate the notion of inequality”. The general thesis is that inequality is a “complex notion,” as shown by the fact that there are many different ways of measuring it. This is relentlessly detailed in a series of chapters that many will find rather hard …Read more
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13You and the State: A Short Introduction to Political Philosophy (edited book)Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 2008.This unusual introduction to political philosophy draws on its history and main theories_classic liberal, democratic, socialist, radical_with an eye to how each sees the place of the individual in the political order
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2Violence and warIn Tom L. Beauchamp & Tom Regan (eds.), Matters of life and death, Temple University Press. 1980.
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139Aesthetics, Charity, Utility, and Distributive JusticeThe Monist 56 (4): 527-551. 1972.As I sit down to begin this essay, the strains of “Tristan und Isolde” are still ringing in my ears; meanwhile, another dozen or so Pakistanian refugees have died for lack of sufficient food, shelter, or medical attention, probably, during the time it will have taken to compose this paragraph. The Isolde in that performance commanded, probably, a fee of four or five thousand dollars; each member of the audience paid, on the average, perhaps ten dollars to see the performance. This works out, pro…Read more
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86Pornography: The Other Side F. M. Christensen New York: Praeger, 1990, x + 188 pp. US$19.95 (review)Dialogue 35 (2): 420-424. 1996.
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185The Relevance of Decision Theory to Ethical TheoryEthical Theory and Moral Practice 13 (5): 497-520. 2010.Morality for the purposes of this paper consists of sets of rules or principles intended for the general regulation of conduct for all. Intuitionist accounts of morality are rejected as making reasoned analysis of morals impossible. In many interactions, there is partial conflict and partial cooperation. From the general social point of view, the rational thing to propose is that we steer clear of conflict and promote cooperation. This is what it is rational to propose to reinforce, and to assis…Read more
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51Liberal-Conservative: The Real Controversy (review)Journal of Value Inquiry 34 (2): 167-188. 2000.
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129Promising, Expecting, and UtilityCanadian Journal of Philosophy 1 (2). 1971.In this paper, I shall be concerned to explore the utilitarian account of promising, which for some time has had, in many circles, the status of a dead horse. My aim is not to flog it, however, but to show that perhaps it yet lives. At least, I hope to show that some prominent and apparently powerful objections to this account do not find their mark. In the course of this, several subjects of wider interest will come in for review as well, and it is hoped that some further light on the utilitari…Read more
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101Discussion-review: Evolutionary biology, altruism, and moral theoryBiology and Philosophy 15 (2): 259-274. 2000.
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161Terrorism and PacifismInternational Journal of Applied Philosophy 17 (2): 157-172. 2003.Pacifism and terrorism are at opposite ends of one spectrum: pacifists have too many friends; terrorists have too many enemies. The indiscriminacy robs both of any credibility. Both fail to distinguish between aggressors and their victims. Discussion of terrorism, however, is complicated by insufficient attention to the distinction between noncombatants and innocents. Just War theory relies heavily on that distinction, providing protections to noncombatants as such, without going into the furthe…Read more
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University of WaterlooDepartment of Philosophy
Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
Areas of Specialization
| Value Theory |