•  7
    No Title available: Reviews
    Economics and Philosophy 12 (1): 113-119. 1996.
  •  631
    Justificatory Liberalism (review)
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 59 (3): 821-825. 1999.
  •  987
    Debate: On Christiano's the constitution of equality
    Journal of Political Philosophy 17 (2): 241-252. 2009.
    No Abstract
  •  2
    Book Review (review)
    Economics and Philosophy 12 (1): 113-119. 1996.
  •  680
    The Democracy/Contractualism Analogy
    Philosophy and Public Affairs 31 (4): 387-412. 2003.
  •  10
    On Sunstein's Infotopia
    Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory 56 (120): 14-29. 2009.
    Sunstein argues that democratic theory has recently rested its normative claims on a vast but empirically uninformed optimism about the ability of collective deliberation to lead to morally and rationally better decisions. Once that question is considered empirically, he argues, deliberation turns out to be mixed at best, and a disaster at worst. I want to suggest that Sunstein exaggerates the claims of the deliberative democrats, and interprets the empirical literature against deliberation in a…Read more
  •  620
    Mutual benevolence and the theory of happiness
    Journal of Philosophy 87 (4): 187-204. 1990.
  •  1007
    The papers published in this special issue can fairly be unified under the heading “Epistemic Democracy,” but there is more variety among them than this might indicate. They exhibit the broad range of ways in which epistemological considerations are figuring in contemporary philosophical discussions of democracy. The authors range from young and promising to established and distinguished. I'd like to introduce a few of the issues that run through the papers, sprinkling references to the actual p…Read more
  •  26
    What's So Rickety? Richardson's Non‐Epistemic Democracy
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 71 (1): 204-204. 2007.
  •  7
    There is a growing literature under the banner of "deliberative democracy," and Paul Weithman suggests that much of it is based on, or at least implies, a critique of the kind of theory of justice pioneered by Rawls 1. The issue at stake is whether a democratic political theory can admit independent normative standards that apply to and constrain democratic decisions. A certain kind of critic thinks independent standards are anti-democratic. Weithman's defense of Rawlsian theory against this cha…Read more