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468Bertrand Russell's Defence of the Cosmological ArgumentAmerican Philosophical Quarterly 35 (1): 87-100. 1998.According to the cosmological argument, there must be a self-existent being, because, if every being were a dependent being, we would lack an explanation of the fact that there are any dependent beings at all, rather than nothing. This argument faces an important, but little-noticed objection: If self-existent beings may exist, why may not also self-explanatory facts also exist? And if self-explanatory facts may exist, why may not the fact that there are any dependent beings be a self-explana…Read more
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250Y and Z Are Not Off the Hook: The Survival Lottery Made FairerJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 35 (4): 396-401. 2010.In this article I show that the argument in John Harris's famous "Survival Lottery" paper cannot be right. Even if we grant Harris's assumptions—of the justifiability of such a lottery, the correctness of maximizing consequentialism, the indistinguishability between killing and letting die, the practical and political feasibility of such a scheme—the argument still will not yield the conclusion that Harris wants. On his own terms, the medically needy should be less favored (and more vulnerable t…Read more
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60Review: T.L.S. Sprigge,The Rational Foundations of Ethics (review)Philosophical Books 30 (1): 49-51. 1989.
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180Robert Audi and the Method of Descriptive Manifestation (review)Philosophical Books 44 (1). 2003.
Leeds, West Yorkshire, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Specialization
| Epistemology |
| Philosophy of Religion |
| Meta-Ethics |
| Normative Ethics |