•  1
    ""The characteristics of a valid" empirical" slippery-slope argument
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 3 (4): 301-302. 1992.
  •  2
    Forgiving and Hoping
    Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 82 163-172. 2008.
    The word “forgiveness” and its verbal form, “forgiving,” may appear to have one and the same meaning whenever it is used. But the first thesis of this essay is that several distinct kinds of human activity are denominated by this word, and their differences are philosophically important. The second thesis of this essay is that some of the human activities denominated by this word have a close connection with hope, more specifically with hoping-in-a-person. The third thesis of this essay is that,…Read more
  •  14
    Teaching Ethics: Right to Refuse?
    with Angela R. Holder, James D. Gagnon, J. Richard Durnan, and Mary Ellen Waithe
    Hastings Center Report 21 (3): 39-40. 1991.
  •  32
    What should count as basic health care?
    Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 4 (2). 1983.
    The concept of basic healt.h care has grown steadily in importance in recent years as more and more of those who reflect on the issue of a right to health care conclude that we need to distinguish between kinds of health care to which people do have a right and others to which they do not have a right. There is little consensus on where to draw this line. But there does seem to be general agreement that, if this distinction is valid, it is so because some kinds of health care are less important,…Read more
  •  4
    Social Rules and Patterns of Behavior
    Philosophy Research Archives 3 879-895. 1977.
    In this paper I clarify the distinction between actions performed under a social rule and a mere pattern of behavior through an examination of two distinctive features of actions performed under a social rule. Developing an argument proposed by H.L.A. Hart in The Concept of Law, I first argue that, where a social rule exists, there nonconformity/conformity to the pattern of behavior set down in the rule count as good reasons for criticism/commendation of actions covered by the rule. Secondly I a…Read more
  •  14
    Do corporations have moral rights?
    Journal of Business Ethics 4 (4). 1985.
    My aim in this paper is to explore the notion that corporations have moral rights within the context of a constitutive rules model of corporate moral agency. The first part of the paper will briefly introduce the notion of moral rights, identifying the distinctive feature of moral rights, as contrasted with other moral categories, in Vlastos' terms of overridingness. The second part will briefly summarize the constitutive rules approach to the moral agency of corporations (à la French, Smith, Oz…Read more
  • An explanation and a method for the ethics of journalism
    with Deni Elliott
    In Christopher Meyers (ed.), Journalism ethics: a philosophical approach, Oxford University Press. 2010.