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75Reply to Redding, Rosen and WoodHegel Bulletin 33 (2): 23-35. 2012.Hegel'sPhilosophy of Rightis more than a major work of political and legal philosophy; it is a battleground for two different interpretive approaches. MyHegel's Political Philosophy: A Systematic Reading of the Philosophy of Rightargues that these approaches are mistaken about their differences and that one approach offers a more compelling interpretation ofHegel's Philosophy of Rightthan the other. I will briefly outline my defence of the systematic reading of thePhilosophy of Rightbefore reply…Read more
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69Moral FrankensteinsAmerican Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 3 (4): 28-30. 2012.Moral enhancement techniques modifying brain processes to produce improved moral conduct present us with new challenges for how we grapple with the ethical questions raised. John Shook (2012) argues that we should greet these developments with some measure of skepticism and cynicism regarding their success and desirability. This commentary considers further Shook’s scepticism. It is argued that the issue of “moral enhancement” raises questions about which view(s) may benefit and the problems thi…Read more
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69Opening the Tomb of New Philosophical Accounts of DeathJournal of Value Inquiry 52 (2): 149-151. 2018.Many efforts are directed towards philosophical accounts of life from life’s meaning to how it should be led. Often overlooked are no less important issues concerning the end of life. Questions like what is death?, is immortality desirable?, is death ‘bad’ for the person who dies?, can the dead be harmed or punished? and what, if any, obligations do we have towards the dead? – these are but a few key concerns deserving greater attention. This special issue brings together three contributions tha…Read more
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85Vote Buying and Tax-cut PromisesTheoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory 63 (146): 20-35. 2016.Both vote buying and tax-cut promises are attempts to manipulate voters through cash incentives in order to win elections, but only vote buying is illegal. Should we extend the ban on vote buying to tax-cut promises? This article will argue for three conclusions. The first is that tax-cut promises should be understood as a form of vote buying. The second is that campaign promises are a form of vote buying. The third conclusion is that campaign promises, including tax-cut promises, should not be …Read more
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176Book Reviews Richard L. Lippke, Rethinking Imprisonment. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007. Pp. 278. $95.00Ethics 118 (3): 562-564. 2008.This is a review of Richard Lippke - "Rethinking Imprisonment".
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198Thom Brooks reviews Shaprio on democratic theory.
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277Is eating meat ethical?Think 16 (47): 9-13. 2017.Eating meat can be ethical, but only when it does not violate rights. This requires that the ways in which meat is produced and prepared for human consumption satisfies certain standards. While many current practices may fall short of this standard, this does not justify the position that eating meat cannot be ethical under any circumstances and there should be no principled objection to its possibility.
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76The Legacy of John Rawls (edited book)Continuum International Publishing Group. 2005.This book fills the void, making a substantial contribution not only to work on Rawls's thought but to contemporary debates in ethics and justice as well.
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177Unlocking Morality from Criminal LawJournal of Moral Philosophy 14 (3): 339-352. 2017.This review article critically examines R. A. Duff and Stuart P. Green’s wide-ranging Philosophical Foundations of Criminal Law. The book captures well a crucial debate at the heart of its topic: is morality a key for understanding criminal law? I first consider legal moralism arguments answering this question in the affirmative and argue they should be rejected. I next consider alternatives to argue that philosophers of criminal law should look beyond legal moralism for more compelling theories…Read more
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141Not just war: Eisikovits on A Theory of TrucesJournal of Global Ethics 13 (1): 4-5. 2017.More work has gone into thinking about the philosophical justifications for starting a just war than bringing political violence to an end. The papers in this special section explore themes in Nir Eisikovits’s groundbreaking book A Theory of Truces and why truces deserve greater philosophical attention. This introduction briefly raises these issues and provides an overview of the papers.
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223Hegel, Nietzsche, and Philosophy: Thinking FreedomPhilosophy 79 (1): 149-153. 2004.This is a book review of Will Dudley, "Hegel, Nietzsche, and Philosophy"
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91German Idealism and the Concept of Punishment, by Jean‐Christophe Merle, trans. Joseph J. Kominkiewicz with Jean‐Christophe Merle and Frances Brown. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009, xv + 207 pp. ISBN 978 0 521 88684 0 hb (review)European Journal of Philosophy 20 (1): 179-182. 2012.Thom Brooks book review.
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71T.H. Green's Theory of PunishmentHistory of Political Thought 24 (4): 685-702. 2003.Green agrees with Kant on the abstract character of moral law as categorical imperatives and that intentional dispositions are central to a moral justification of punishment. The central problem with Kant's account is that we are unable to know these dispositions beyond a reasonable estimate. Green offers a practical alternative, positing moral law as an ideal to be achieved, but not immediately enforceable through positive law. Moral and positive law are bridged by Green's theory of the common …Read more
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289Equality and DemocracyEthical Perspectives 14 (1): 3-12. 2007.In a recent article, Thomas Christiano defends the intrinsic justice of democracy grounded in the principle of equal consideration of interests. Each citizen is entitled to a single vote, equal in weight to all other citizens. The problem with this picture is that all citizens must meet a threshold of minimal competence. My argument is that Christiano is wrong to claim a minimum threshold of competency is fully consistent with the principle of equality. While standards of minimal competency may …Read more
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173Plato, Hegel, and DemocracyBulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 53 24-50. 2006.Nearly every major philosophy, from Plato to Hegel and beyond, has argued that democracy is an inferior form of government, at best. Yet, virtually every contemporary political philosophy working today - whether in an analytic or postmodern tradition - endorses democracy in one variety or another. Should we conclude then that the traditional canon is meaningless for helping us theorize about a just state? In this paper, I will take up the criticisms and positive proposals of two such canonical f…Read more
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321A critique of pragmatism and deliberative democracyTransactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 45 (1). 2009.This paper offers two potential worries in Robert B. Talisse's A Pragmatist Philosophy of Democracy. The first worry is that is that the picture of democracy on offer is incomplete. While Talisse correctly argues that democracy is about more than elections, democracy is also about more than deliberation between citizens. Talisse's deliberative democracy is problematic to the degree its view of deliberation fails to account for democracy. The second worry we may have concerns the relationship bet…Read more
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41New Waves in Ethics (edited book)Palgrave-Macmillan. 2011.New Waves in Ethics brings together the leading future figures in ethics broadly construed, with essays ranging from meta-ethics and normative ethics to applied ethics and political philosophy. Topics include new work on experimental philosophy, feminism, and global justice, incorporating perspectives informed from historical and contemporary approaches alike. An ideal collection for anyone interested in the most important debates in ethics and political philosophy, as well as those with an inte…Read more
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63Becoming British: UK Citizenship ExaminedBiteback. 2016.From Syrian asylum seekers to super-rich foreign investors, immigration is one of the most controversial issues facing Britain today. Politicians kick the subject from one election to the next with energetic but ineffectual promises to ‘crack down’, while newspaper editors plaster it across front pages. But few know the truth behind the headlines; indeed, the almost daily changes to our complex immigration laws pile up so quickly that even the officials in charge struggle to keep up. In this cle…Read more
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45What did the British Idealists do for Us?In New Waves in Ethics, Palgrave-macmillan. pp. 28--47. 2011.Perhaps one of the most underappreciated philosophical movements is British Idealism. This movement arose during the latter half of the nineteenth century and began to wane after the outbreak of the First World War. British Idealism has produced a number of important figures, such as Bernard Bosanquet, R. G. Collingwood, F. H. Bradley and T. H. Green, as well as other important, but less well known, figures, such as J. S. Mackenzie, John Henry Muirhead and James Seth. It has also given us a numb…Read more
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60EditorialJournal of Moral Philosophy 9 (2): 145-146. 2012.Thom Brooks editorial in Journal of Moral Philosophy.
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4Justifying TerrorismPublic Affairs Quarterly 24 (3): 189-196. 2010.Virginia Held's recent How Terrorism Is Wrong offers us any number of important contributions to how we think about terrorist violence. My discussion will focus on only one of these contributions, namely, how terrorism may be justified. This justification rests upon a group being denied a voice. Thus, terrorism may become justified where this demand to be heard is denied, coupled with the corollary that all nonviolent options have been exhausted. I will argue that we should require a more narrow…Read more
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116The Fall ParadoxPhilosophy and Theology 19 (1-2): 3-5. 2007.In the Garden of Eden, the serpent convinces Eve to eat fruit from the Tree of Conscience, which she does and shares with Adam. Adam and Eve act in contravention to God’s orders against eating fruit from the tree. Traditional interpretations have suggested that this event—commonly referred to as “the Fall”—is an event where the serpent lied to Eve and that it was entirely negative. Instead, I argue that the serpent was correct to say, in fact, that in eating thisfruit we would become closer to G…Read more
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52EditorialJournal of Moral Philosophy 3 (3): 263. 2006.Thom Brooks editorial in Journal of Moral Philosophy.
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154Is Hegel a Retributivist?Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 25 (1-2): 113-126. 2004.Amongst contemporary theorists, the most widespread interpretation of Hegel's theory of punishment is that it is a retributivist theory of annulment, where punishments cancel the performance of crimes. The theory is retributivist insofar as the criminal punished must be demonstrated to be deserving of a punishment that is commensurable in value only to the nature of his crime, rather than to any consequentialist considerations. As Antony Duff says: [retributivism] justifies punishment in terms n…Read more
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2Reason without Freedom: The Problem of Epistemic NormativityInternational Journal of Philosophical Studies 12 (4): 513. 2004.review.
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51Current Controversies in Political Philosophy (edited book)Routledge. 2013.Current Controversies in Political Philosophy brings together an international team of leading philosophers to explore and debate four key and dynamic issues in the field in an accessible way. Should we all be cosmopolitans? – Gillian Brock and Cara Nine Are rights important? – Rowan Cruft and Sonu Bedi Is sexual objectification wrong and, if so, why? – Lina Papadaki and Scott Anderson What to do about climate change? – Alexa Zellentin and Thom Brooks These questions are the focus of intense deb…Read more
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147Hegel and The Problem of PovertyKilikya Felsefe Dergisi / Cilicia Journal of Philosophy 2 (1): 1-9. 2015.On Hegel's problem of poverty as a problem of alienation affecting rich and poor.
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49Rousseau and LawRoutledge. 2005.Jean-Jacques Rousseau stands as one of the most influential figures in the history of philosophy. His masterpiece-The Social Contract-has had a profound effect on legal and political theorists ever since its appearance. Rousseau and Law presents for the first time in one collection the most important contemporary work exploring his many contributions to legal theory. These essays deal with a variety of issues, such as social contract theories, democratic rights, fundamental law, natural law and …Read more
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147A New Problem with the Capabilities ApproachThe Harvard Review of Philosophy 20 100-106. 2014.Martha Nussbaum’s “influential capabilities approach” offers us a powerful, universal standard of justice. The approach builds off of pioneering work by Amartya Sen in economic development. Much of the contemporary interest in the capabilities approach has focused upon how we might spell out a list of precisely which capabilities must be made universally available and protected, a list that Sen has not provided himself. Nussbaum’s list of capabilities is arguably the most successful attempt at d…Read more
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200Publishing advice for graduate studentsSocial Science Research Network 1 1-31. 2008.Graduate students often lack concrete advice on publishing. This essay is an attempt to fill this important gap. Advice is given on how to publish everything from book reviews to articles, replies to book chapters, and how to secure both edited book contracts and authored monograph contracts, along with plenty of helpful tips and advice on the publishing world (and how it works) along the way in what is meant to be a comprehensive, concrete guide to publishing that should be of tremendous value …Read more
APA Eastern Division
Durham, England, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Specialization
| Philosophy of Law |
| Social and Political Philosophy |
| 19th Century Philosophy |