•  44
    Wrongness, wisdom and wilderness
    Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 11 (1): 58-61. 1998.
  •  22
    Morals by Agreement (review)
    International Philosophical Quarterly 27 (3): 336-338. 1987.
  • Commentaries
    Journal of Value Inquiry 4 (4): 267. 1970.
  •  35
    Reason and Morality in the Age of Nuclear Deterrence
    Analyse & Kritik 10 (2): 206-232. 1988.
    The argument in this paper is that although rationality and morality are distinguishable concepts, there is nevertheless a rational morality, a set of principles, namely, which it is rational of all to require of all. The argument of this paper is that such a morality would certainly issue in a general condemnation of aggressive war. (Whether this also makes it irrational for States to engage in such activities is another, and not entirely settled, matter). Correlatively, it would issue in a str…Read more
  •  1
    Ayn Rand as Moral and Political Philosopher
    Reason Papers 23 96-100. 1998.
  •  25
    Political platonism, liberalism, and democracy
    Journal of Social Philosophy 34 (1). 2003.
  •  24
    Equality vs. Liberty: Advantage, Liberty
    Social Philosophy and Policy 2 (1): 33-60. 1984.
    The subject of this essay is political, and therefore social, philosophy; and therefore, ethics. We want to know whether the right thing for a society to do is to incorporate in its structure requirements that we bring about equality, or liberty, or both if they are compatible, and if incompatible then which if either, or what sort of mix if they can to some degree be mixed. But this fairly succinct statement of the issue before us requires considerable clarification, even as a statment of the i…Read more
  •  166
    The case for free market environmentalism
    Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 8 (2): 145-156. 1995.
    Environmental Ethics is the ethics of how we humans are to relate to each other about the environment we live in. The best way to adjust inevitable differences among us in this respect is by private property. Each person takes the best care of what he owns, and ownership entails the free market, which enables people to make mutually advantageous trades with those who might use it even better. Public regulation, by contrast, becomes management in the interests of the regulators, or of special int…Read more
  •  2
    Violence and war
    In Tom L. Beauchamp & Tom Regan (eds.), Matters of life and death, Temple University Press. 1980.
  •  12
    J.J.C. Smart., Ethics, Persuasion and Truth
    International Studies in Philosophy 21 (1): 116-118. 1989.
  •  257
    Brettschneider argues that the granting of property rights to all entails a right of exclusion by acquirer/owners against all others, that this exclusionary right entails a loss on their part, and that to make up for this, property owners owe any nonowners welfare rights. Against this, I argue that exclusion is not in fact a cost. Everyone is to have liberty rights, which are negative: what people are excluded from is the liberty to attack and despoil others. Everyone, whether an owner of extern…Read more
  •  124
    Property and rights
    Social Philosophy and Policy 27 (1): 101-134. 2010.
    I present what I take to be the approach to property rights, in which property is basically a unitary concept: owners are the ones with the right to do, and prohibit others from doing, whatever there is to do with the thing owned, within the limits imposed by the rights of others to their things. I expound and defend the idea of in more or less Lockean mode. I also point to the many difficulties of application of the general idea, leading to the need to negotiate at many points. For example, the…Read more
  •  26
    Sterba's program of philosophical reconciliation
    Journal of Social Philosophy 30 (3). 1999.
  •  26
    Book Review:Human Acts. Eric D'Arcy (review)
    Ethics 75 (2): 145-. 1965.
  •  76
    Democracy and Economic Rights
    Social Philosophy and Policy 9 (1): 29. 1992.
    We have long been accustomed to thinking of democracy as a major selling point of Western institutions. That a set of political institutions should be democratic is widely regarded as the sine qua non of their legitimacy. So widespread is this belief that even those whose institutions do not look very democratic to us nevertheless insist on proclaiming them to be such. Meanwhile, an adulatory attitude toward democracy has arisen in many quarters, and many theorists have taken up anew the idea th…Read more
  •  32
    Response to Smith
    Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 8 (2): 159-160. 1995.
  •  215
    Is world poverty a moral problem for the wealthy?
    The Journal of Ethics 8 (4): 397-408. 2004.
    This article discusses the question of poverty and wealth in light of several theses put forward by Larry Temkin. The claim that there is a sort of cosmic injustice involved when great disparities of ability or of wealth are found. He is concerned especially about disparities that are undeserved. It is agreed that this is unfortunate, but not agreed that they are unjust in a sense that supports the imposition of rectification on anyone else. Nor is poverty typically undeserved in the only really…Read more