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Paul Hurley

Claremont McKenna College
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    37
    • Most Recent
    • Most Downloaded
    • Topics
  •  Events
    2
  •  News and Updates
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 More details
  • Claremont McKenna College
    Department of Philosophy
    Regular Faculty
University of Pittsburgh
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1988
CV
Claremont, California, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Meta-Ethics
Normative Ethics
Value Theory
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Action
Philosophy of Law
Social and Political Philosophy
  • All publications (37)
  •  132
    How weakness of the will is possible
    Mind 101 (401): 85-88. 1992.
    Weakness of Will
  •  792
    Comments on Douglas Portmore’s Commonsense Consequentialism
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 88 (1): 225-232. 2014.
    Objections to Consequentialism, Misc
  •  4
    Paradox of Deontology
    In Hugh LaFollette (ed.), International Encyclopedia of Ethics, John Wiley & Sons. 2021.
    Ethics
  •  123
    The Hidden Consequentialist Assumption
    Analysis 52 (4). 1992.
    Quantum Mechanics
  •  32
    Editorial
    Philosophical Studies 148 (1): 1-1. 2010.
  •  71
    A Kantian rationale for desire-based justification
    Philosophers' Imprint 1 1-16. 2001.
    This paper demonstrates that a rationale for a circumscribed form of desire-based justification can be developed out of a contemporary Kantian account as a natural extension of that account. It maintains that certain of Christine Korsgaard's recent arguments establish only that desires must have certain features antithetical to instrumentalism in order to justify. Other arguments purport to establish the standard (stronger) result: that because desires do not have these features, they cannot jus…Read more
    This paper demonstrates that a rationale for a circumscribed form of desire-based justification can be developed out of a contemporary Kantian account as a natural extension of that account. It maintains that certain of Christine Korsgaard's recent arguments establish only that desires must have certain features antithetical to instrumentalism in order to justify. Other arguments purport to establish the standard (stronger) result: that because desires do not have these features, they cannot justify. Her arguments for this strong result, it contends, cannot be reconciled with central commitments in her epistemology and philosophy of mind. The consistent implementation of these commitments opens up a surprising space within what is still readily recognizable as a Kantian ethics--the space for desire-based justification.
    Desire and Motivation
  •  274
    Review of Michael Thompson, Life and Action: Elementary Structures of Practice and Practical Thought (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (2). 2009.
    The Nature of Action
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