•  26
    Dual-Investor Theory and the Case for Benefit Corporations
    Business and Professional Ethics Journal 35 (1): 51-72. 2016.
    Benefit corporations, whose chartered mission includes attending to specific and general social benefits, are sometimes criticized as monstrous hybrids trying to serve two incompatible purposes. Dual-Investor Theory, which regards society as an investor in every business venture, answers this objection by providing a natural and compelling rationale for benefit corporations. Several other objections to benefit corporations are articulated and addressed, including the problems of greenwashing and…Read more
  •  20
    Applying new theories about rights to pressing social issues, A Holistic Approach to Rights suggests major changes are needed in the ways we think about rights and formulating social policy
  •  33
    With Virtue for All
    Southwest Philosophy Review 5 (1): 71-76. 1989.
  •  41
    Supervision and the Logic of Resentment
    Philosophy of Management 9 (2): 65-80. 2010.
    Because resentment features prominently in work relations, supervisors should understand the nature of such emotions and how to address them. Popular wisdom’s insistence that emotions cannot be rationally assessed is mistaken. Emotions are judgments embodied in perceptions, dispositions, and “raw feels,” that reflect one’s worldview. At the core of paradigmatic resentment is the moral judgment that someone has betrayed one by unfairly rejecting one in a way that shows ill-will. Non-paradigmatic …Read more