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5393The Goods of Work (Other Than Money!)Journal of Social Philosophy 47 (1): 70-89. 2016.The evaluation of labour markets and of particular jobs ought to be sensitive to a plurality of benefits and burdens of work. We use the term 'the goods of work' to refer to those benefits of work that cannot be obtained in exchange for money and that can be enjoyed mostly or exclusively in the context of work. Drawing on empirical research and various philosophical traditions of thinking about work we identify four goods of work: 1) attaining various types of excellence; 2) making a social cont…Read more
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239What Could Be Wrong with a Mortgage? Private Debt Markets from a Perspective of Structural InjusticeJournal of Political Philosophy 25 (4): 411-434. 2016.In many Western capitalist economies, private indebtedness is pervasive, but it has received little attention from political philosophers. Economic theory emphasizes the liberating potential of debt contracts, but its picture is based on assumptions that do not always hold, especially when there is a background of structural injustice. Private debt contracts are likely to miss their liberating potential if there is deception or lack of information, if there is insufficient access to (regular for…Read more
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92„Moral Luck“ in Moral und RechtArchiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie 99 (2): 212-227. 2013.A case of Moral Luck occurs whenever we normatively assess agents for things that depend on factors beyond their control. The paper takes a comparative approach and examines how morality and law deal with such cases. The comparative perspective allows us to explain the problem of Moral Luck as a tension inherent in normative orders: While normative orders are based on a strong connection between responsibility and voluntariness, this idealist assumption is at least partly at odds with their func…Read more
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140Distributive Justice, Feasibility Gridlocks, and the Harmfulness of Economic IdeologyEthical Theory and Moral Practice 18 (5): 957-969. 2015.Many political theorists think about how to make societies more just. In recent years, with interests shifting from principles to their institutional realization, there has been much debate about feasibility and the role it should play in theorizing. What has been underexplored, however, is how feasibility depends on the attitudes and perceptions of individuals, not only with regard to their own behaviour, but also with regard to the behaviour of others. This can create coordination problems, wh…Read more
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159The Community of Commerce: Smith's Rhetoric of Sympathy in the Opening of the Wealth of NationsPhilosophy and Rhetoric 46 (1): 65-87. 2013.In the late 1740s a young man who had just returned from Oxford to his native Scotland gave a series of lectures on rhetoric and belles lettres in Edinburgh. This man was no other than Adam Smith, who would soon become famous for his writings about moral philosophy and, most of all, economic issues. Smith the moral philosopher and Smith the economist quickly overshadowed Smith the theoretician of rhetoric. Even in today’s scholarly perception the curious fact that the founder of economics made h…Read more
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56Hegel's Thought in Europe: Currents, Crosscurrents and Undercurrents (edited book)Palgrave. 2013.It is not clear what the intellectual history of the last 200 years would have looked like without the philosophy of G.W.F. Hegel, but it is clear that it would have looked different. His vast intellectual system was taken up by thinkers from left to right, and from very different philosophical schools. This volume brings together accessible, concise essays from leading scholars that present important currents of Hegelian thought in different European countries, including pre-revolutionary Russi…Read more
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University of GroningenAssociate Professor
University of Oxford
DPhil, 2011
Areas of Specialization
| Social and Political Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| Normative Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |
| 19th Century Philosophy |