•  86
    Liberalism and the Polygamy Question
    Social Philosophy Today 23 161-174. 2007.
    Part I of this paper examines liberal toleration and its relevance to the debate on polygamy. The remaining sections consider Marci Hamilton’s claim that polygamy should not be accommodated. Hamilton’s position rests on three kinds of arguments which I call: 1) the argument from public reason; 2) the argument from democracy; and 3) the argument from exploitation. Each of these fails: 1) fails because Hamilton’s conception of public reason is too restrictive; 2) fails because it rests on a proced…Read more
  • Charles Larmore, The Autonomy of Morality
    Philosophy in Review 29 (3): 200. 2009.
  •  42
    Axel Honneth’s Ethical Theory of Recognition
    International Studies in Philosophy 31 (1): 97-110. 1999.
  •  24
    The Modern Social Imaginary (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 38 (4): 169-170. 2006.
  •  27
    Proceduralism and Justification in Habermas’s Discourse Ethics
    Philosophy Today 46 (3): 300-311. 2002.
    I argue that Habermas's conception of moral justification cannot be proceduralist in the way he claims that it is if discourse ethics is to remain a version of Kantian ethics. This argument is supported by two claims. The first is that Habermas claims there are no substantive constraints on moral argument. The second is that discourse ethics requires the substantive constraint of moral respect where moral respect is understood to be a preprocedural norm to which all moral claims are accountable
  •  10
    Justice Without Borders (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 38 (4): 167-168. 2006.
  •  29
    Concealment and Exposure (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 37 (4): 156-157. 2005.
  •  10
    The Struggle for Recognition (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 34 (4): 180-181. 2002.
  •  30
    Liberalism and the Polygamy Question
    Social Philosophy Today 23 161-174. 2007.
    Part I of this paper examines liberal toleration and its relevance to the debate on polygamy. The remaining sections consider Marci Hamilton’s claim that polygamy should not be accommodated. Hamilton’s position rests on three kinds of arguments which I call: 1) the argument from public reason; 2) the argument from democracy; and 3) the argument from exploitation. Each of these fails: 1) fails because Hamilton’s conception of public reason is too restrictive; 2) fails because it rests on a proced…Read more
  •  32
    Adam Smith’s Marketplace of Life (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 37 (4): 155-156. 2005.
  •  42
    The politics of religious freedom
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 43 (6): 551-570. 2017.
    The aim of this article is to consider the prospects of a liberal conception of religious freedom in some Muslim-majority states. Part I offers a brief sketch of three approaches to religious freedom that inform my view. Part II then presents a liberal framework for religious toleration that draws ideas from Rainer Forst’s Toleration in Conflict, as well as some perennial themes in classical liberal thought. I briefly examine three case studies in Part III: the Turkish Republic; the Arab Spring …Read more