•  2
    The Theoretical Interpretation of Voting
    Dissertation, The University of Wisconsin - Madison. 1986.
    The present thesis is intended as a contribution toward a Rousseauean theory of democracy. The central problem discussed is how the act of voting must be interpreted in democratic theory. The notion of a theoretical interpretation of voting is discussed in Chapter One. A theory of democracy must include an interpretation of the act of voting if any praise or criticism of democracy is to be possible. The theoretical interpretation is distinct from an empirical account of voting behavior, and also…Read more
  •  258
    The Epistemic Dimension of Democratic Authority
    Modern Schoolman 74 (4): 259-276. 1997.
  •  93
    Mutual Benevolence and the Theory of Happiness
    Journal of Philosophy 87 (4): 187-204. 1990.
  •  25
    Introduction: Epistemic Approaches to Democracy
    Episteme: A Journal of Social Epistemology 5 (1): 1-4. 2008.
  •  243
    The persuasiveness of democratic majorities
    Politics, Philosophy and Economics 3 (2): 131-142. 2004.
    Under the assumptions of the standard Condorcet Jury Theorem, majority verdicts are virtually certain to be correct if the competence of voters is greater than one-half, and virtually certain to be incorrect if voter competence is less than one-half. But which is the case? Here we turn the Jury Theorem on its head, to provide one way of addressing that question. The same logic implies that, if the outcome saw 60 percent of voters supporting one proposition and 40 percent the other, then average …Read more
  •  5
    Controversy has recently erupted, at least in a recent story in the Independent, over the question of whether Brown's Philosophy Department has been inappropriately exclusionary of courses in other departments, of diverse philosophical traditions, and of non-white philosophers. These are questions well worth asking, although the article's critical stance requires some scrutiny. It is worth supplementing the article with some information that might help students think about whether they ought to …Read more
  •  148
    The Oxford Handbook of Political Philosophy (edited book)
    Oxford University Press USA. 2012.
    This volume includes 22 new pieces by leaders in the field on both perennial and emerging topics of keen interest to contemporary political philosophers.
  •  44
    :Cambridge Companion to Rawls
    Ethics 114 (3): 608-615. 2004.
    John Rawls is the most significant and influential philosopher and moral philosopher of the twentieth century. His work has profoundly shaped contemporary discussions of social, political and economic justice in philosophy, law, political science, economics and other social disciplines. In this exciting collection of new essays, many of the world's leading political and moral theorists discuss the full range of Rawls's contribution to the concepts of political and economic justice, democracy, li…Read more
  •  114
    Reply to Wiens
    European Journal of Political Theory 15 (3): 353-362. 2016.
    In Human Nature and the Limits of Political Philosophy, I argued that justice might require things of people that they cannot bring themselves to do. A central step was to argue that this does not entail an inability to ‘do’ the putatively required thing. David Wiens challenges that argument of mine, and this piece is my reply.