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114Hobbes on the basis of political obligationJournal of the History of Philosophy 15 (2): 165-170. 1977.
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116Criminal Justice and Strict Liability: The Obligation of Society to Punish Only the GuiltyAmerican Journal of Jurisprudence 27 (1): 109-113. 1982.We argue in this essay that any society that organizes itself to punish criminals should in justice consider itself strictly liable to punish only those who are guilty in fact of the crimes for which they are punished. We argue that justice, not utility, is the basis of the obligation society has not to punish the innocent and that any society that is just would bind itself by statute to compensate the innocents it punishes by mistake. We hope to have made it evident that when the justice of cri…Read more
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12Anselm and Aquinas on the Fall of Satan: A Case Study of Retributive PunishmentProceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 56 (n/a): 61. 1982.
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117The Radical Feminist View of MotherhoodInternational Journal of Applied Philosophy 4 (4): 25-34. 1989.
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105Should there be an Apology for American slavery?Should There Be an Apology for American Slavery? 21 (2): 125-148. 2007.Contemporary white Americans cannot meaningfully ask forgiveness from present-day African Americans for slavery, because such a group apology does not have the mental state needed to communicate regret and intend that listeners forgive the group. Even if the requisite mental state were present, contemporary white Americans are not responsible for the wrong and cannot apologize for wrongs for which they are not responsible. Additionally, such a purported apology is not directed to the victims of…Read more
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104Does Society Have the Right to Force Pregnant Drug Addicts to Abort Their Fetuses?Social Theory and Practice 17 (3): 369-384. 1991.
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58Are Hate Crimes Conceptually Distinct From Other Crimes?Southwest Philosophy Review 16 (1): 189-195. 2000.
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65Should Lawyers Be Prohibited From Misleadng Juries?Southwest Philosophy Review 10 (1): 67-75. 1994.
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78Abortion and TinkeringDialogue 17 (1): 122-125. 1978.Recent defences of abortion on demand have located the morally relevant difference between normal adult human beings and non-viable fetuses in the possession of personhood by the former but not by the latter. It is, so the story goes, morally wrong to kill innocent human beings because they are persons, but non-viable fetuses, though they be biologically human, are nevertheless not persons and may therefore be killed without doing anything morally wrong.
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88The soviet view of the moral and legal obligation of statesStudies in East European Thought 33 (4): 341-361. 1987.
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1Women's Reproductive Rights: Is there a Conflict with a Child's Right to be Born Free from Defects?Journal of Legal Medicine, 7 (3): 356-384. 1986.
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148Retributivism and Fallible Systems of PunishmentCriminal Justice Ethics 30 (3): 240-266. 2011.Abstract I argue for the following, which I dub the ?fallibility syllogism?: (1) All systems of criminal punishment that inflict suffering on the innocent are unjust from a desert-based, retributivist point of view. (2) All past or present human systems of criminal punishment inflict suffering on the innocent. (3) Therefore, all such human systems of criminal punishment are unjust from a desert-based, retributivist point of view. My argument for the first premise is organized in the following wa…Read more
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85Does strict judicial scrutiny involve thetu quoque fallacy?Law and Philosophy 9 (3). 1990.To protect what it deems fundamental rights, the Supreme Court strictly scrutinizes legislation that impinges on these rights. The Court views such legislation as a means to some end the legislation seeks to accomplish. The Court requires that the statute be neither overinclusive nor underinclusive; the legislation may not affect more people than necessary to achieve its end, nor is the statute permitted to leave some people out in achieving its end.I argue that when legislation imposes burdens,…Read more
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Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, ILDepartment Of PhilosophyProfessor
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Law |