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127Well and Good, Fourth Edition: Case Studies in Health Care Ethics (edited book)Broadview Press. 2014.Well and Good presents a combination of "classic" and little-known cases in health care ethics. These cases, accompanied by information about the major ethical theories, give students a chance to grapple with the ethical challenges faced by health care practitioners, policy makers, and recipients. The authors' narrative style and leading questions provoke student interest and engagement, while allowing instructors the freedom to draw from the theoretical perspectives they consider most useful. T…Read more
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38Legality, morality, and the guiding function of lawIn Matthew H. Kramer (ed.), The legacy of H.L.A. Hart: legal, political, and moral philosophy, Oxford University Press. 2008.
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Defeasibility and legal positivismIn Jordi Ferrer Beltrán & Giovanni Battista Ratti (eds.), The Logic of Legal Requirements: Essays on Defeasibility, Oxford University Press. 2012.
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302Readings in Health Care Ethics, Second Edition (edited book)Broadview Press. 2012.Readings in Health Care Ethics provides a wide-ranging selection of important and engaging contributions to the field of health care ethics. The second edition adds a chapter on health care in Canada, and the introduction has been expanded to include discussion of a new direction in feminist naturalized ethics. The book presupposes no prior knowledge, only an interest in the bioethical issues that are shaping our world.
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152Inclusive Legal PositivismPhilosophical Review 106 (1): 133. 1997.Like many recent works in legal theory, especially those focusing on the apparently conflicting schools of legal positivism and natural law, Waluchow’s Inclusive Legal Positivism begins by admitting a degree of perplexity about the field; indeed, he suggests that the field has fallen into “chaos”. Disturbingly, those working within legal theory appear most uncertain about what the tasks of their field are. Legal philosophers often seem to suspect strongly that at least their colleagues in the fi…Read more
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142Herculean positivismOxford Journal of Legal Studies 5 (2): 187-210. 1985.An attempt top reconcile Dworkin with Hart's legal positivism.
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152Authority and the practical difference thesisLegal Theory 6 (1): 45-81. 2000.I. INTRODUCTIONTo what extent are the existence and content of law dependent on morality? Legal Positivism is generally understood to answer: Not at all; the existence of law is one thing, its merit or demerit another thing entirely. Positivism’s historical rival, Natural Law Theory, is widely understood to answer: To a very large extent indeed: An unjust law seems to be no law at all. Recent developments in jurisprudence have rendered these understandings highly questionable and potentially mis…Read more
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76Ethics in Government Peter A. French Prentice-Hall Series in Occupational Ethics Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1983. Pp. 147 (review)Dialogue 23 (2): 364-366. 1984.
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76Review of Douglas E. Edlin (ed.), Common Law Theory (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2008 (8). 2008.
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179Inclusive legal positivismOxford University Press. 1994.This book develops a general theory of law, inclusive legal positivism, which seeks to remain within the tradition represented by authors such as Austin, Hart, MacCormick, and Raz, while sharing some of the virtues of both classical and modern theories of natural law, as represented by authors such as Aquinas, Fuller, Finnis, and Dworkin. Its central theoretical questions are: Does the existence or content of positive law ever depend on moral considerations? If so, is this fact consistent with l…Read more
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2A Common Law Theory of Judicial Review: The Living TreeCambridge University Press. 2006.In this study, W. J. Waluchow argues that debates between defenders and critics of constitutional bills of rights presuppose that constitutions are more or less rigid entities. Within such a conception, constitutions aspire to establish stable, fixed points of agreement and pre-commitment, which defenders consider to be possible and desirable, while critics deem impossible and undesirable. Drawing on reflections about the nature of law, constitutions, the common law, and what it is to be a democ…Read more
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81The Dimensions of Ethics: An Introduction to Ethical TheoryBroadview Press. 2003._The Dimensions of Ethics_ offers a concise but wide-ranging introduction to moral philosophy. In clear and engaging fashion, the author first examines the scope of ethical theory, and explores central metaethical questions such as the issue of relativism, and the relationship between morality and religion. He then turns to an exploration of five theoretical approaches (utilitarianism, the deontological approach of Kant, the ethical pluralism of Ross, virtue ethics, and feminist ethics), in each…Read more
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52Philosophical foundations of the nature of law (edited book)Oxford University Press. 2013.Part I. Furthering debate between leading theories of Law -- The Explantory Role of the Weak Natural Law Thesis -- In Defense of Hart -- Law's Authority is not a Claim to Preemption -- The Normative Fallacy Regarding Law's Authority -- The Problem about the Nature of Law vis-à-vis Legal Rationality Revisited : Towards an Integrative Jurisprudence -- Part II. The Power of Legal Systems -- Law as Power : Two Rule of Law Requirements -- A Comprehensive Hartian Theory of Legal Obligation : Social P…Read more
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79Well and Good, Third Edition: A Case Study Approach to Biomedical EthicsBroadview Press. 1998.Well and Good presents a combination of "classic" and little-known but real-life cases. Included are a range of cases involving nurses and other health professionals as well as many involving doctors. The cases in the main body of the book are accompanied by the editors' impartial discussions of the issues involved. The final section is comprised of unanalysed cases for further study. For the new edition, the introduction has been expanded to include discussions of feminist bioethics and of virt…Read more
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4Rosemary Pattenden, The Judge, Discretion, and the Criminal Trial (review)Philosophy in Review 4 217-219. 1984.
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129Judicial reviewPhilosophy Compass 2 (2). 2007.Courts are sometimes called upon to review a law or some other official act of government to determine its constitutionality, its reasonableness, rationality, or its compatibility with fundamental principles of justice. In some jurisdictions, this power of judicial review includes the ability to ‘strike down’ or nullify a law duly passed by a legislature body. This article examines this practice and various criticisms of it, including the charge that it is fundamentally undemocratic. The focus i…Read more
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Law |