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David Archard

Lancaster UniversityQueen's University, Belfast
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    223
    • Most Recent
    • Most Downloaded
    • Topics
  •  Events
    4
  •  News and Updates
    110

 More details
  • Lancaster University
    Philosophy
    Other faculty (Postdoc, Visiting, etc)
  • Queen's University, Belfast
    School of History, Anthropology, Philosophy and Politics
    Retired faculty
London School of Economics
Department of Philosophy, Logic and Scientific Method
PhD, 1976
Areas of Interest
Applied Ethics
Meta-Ethics
Normative Ethics
Philosophy of Law
Social and Political Philosophy
Philosophy of Gender, Race, and Sexuality
Philosophy, Introductions and Anthologies
2 more
  • All publications (223)
  •  32
    Free Speech and Children’s Interests
    Chicago Kent Law Review 79 (1): 83-102. 2003.
    RightsFreedom and LibertyCivil and Political RightsAutonomy
  •  516
    The Moral and Political Status of Children: New Essays
    with Colin M. [eds] Macleod
    Philosophical Quarterly 54 (216): 490-492. 2002.
    The book contains original essays by distinguished moral and political philosophers on the topic of the moral and political status of children. It covers the themes of children's rights, parental rights and duties, the family and justice, and civic education.
    Social and Political Philosophy, MiscellaneousPolitical TheoryJusticeGlobal Justice
  • Liberals and Communitarians; Liberalism and Modern Society: an Historical Argument (review)
    Radical Philosophy 64. 1993.
  •  1
    Andrew Mason, Explaining Political Disagreement
    Radical Philosophy. forthcoming.
    Political Theory
  • Rape: A Philosophical Investigation; Carnal Knowledge: Rape on Trial (review)
    Radical Philosophy 81. 1997.
    Feminism: Rape and Sexual Violence
  • Review of Ferdinand David Schoeman, Privacy and Social Freedom
    Radical Philosophy 67 60. 1994.
    Autonomy in Applied EthicsPrivacy Rights
  • The Curious Enlightenment of Professor Caritat (review)
    Radical Philosophy 79. 1996.
    17th/18th Century Philosophy
  •  3
    Justice between Age Groups and Generations (review)
    Radical Philosophy 63. 1993.
    Topics in Environmental EthicsFuture Generations
  •  92
    Should Nationalists be Communitarians?
    Journal of Applied Philosophy 13 (2): 215-220. 1996.
    John O'Neill argues in a recent article, ‘Should Communitarians be Nationalists?’, that communitarians are wrong to be committed to the defence of ties of nationhood, both because the nation‐state's rise is associated with the disappearance of the ties of community and because the nation is an illusory community. I argue that the evidence that communitarianism is committed as charged to the defence of nationality is unconvincing. Further, the familiar accusation that the nation is a false or unr…Read more
    John O'Neill argues in a recent article, ‘Should Communitarians be Nationalists?’, that communitarians are wrong to be committed to the defence of ties of nationhood, both because the nation‐state's rise is associated with the disappearance of the ties of community and because the nation is an illusory community. I argue that the evidence that communitarianism is committed as charged to the defence of nationality is unconvincing. Further, the familiar accusation that the nation is a false or unreal community is neither perspicuous nor obviously true. It is important to evaluate the significance and worth of the nation as a community independently of the nationalist prescription that the nation and the state should coincide. The important question is not whether the political community should be a nation, but what sort of community the nation should be.
    Political EthicsCommunitarianismNationalism
  •  86
    Philosophizing About Sex
    Philosophical Quarterly 66 (264): 629-631. 2016.
  • Democracy's Discontent; The Decent Society (review)
    Radical Philosophy 83. 1997.
    Democracy
  •  28
    Informed Consent and the Grounds of Autonomy
    In Thomas Nys, Yvonne Denier & Toon Vandevelde (eds.), Autonomy & paternalism: reflections on the theory and practice of health care, Peeters. pp. 5--113. 2007.
  •  117
    Review: R. A. Duff and Stuart P. Green (eds): Defining Crimes: Essays on the Special Part of the Criminal Law (review)
    Mind 117 (465): 174-176. 2008.
  • On Sartre
    Radical Philosophy 27 45. 1981.
    Jean-Paul Sartre
  •  356
    Children's rights
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2008.
    Children are young human beings. Some children are very young human beings. As human beings children evidently have a certain moral status. There are things that should not be done to them for the simple reason that they are human. At the same time children are different from adult human beings and it seems reasonable to think that there are things children may not do that adults are permitted to do. In the majority of jurisdictions, for instance, children are not allowed to vote, to marry, to b…Read more
    Children are young human beings. Some children are very young human beings. As human beings children evidently have a certain moral status. There are things that should not be done to them for the simple reason that they are human. At the same time children are different from adult human beings and it seems reasonable to think that there are things children may not do that adults are permitted to do. In the majority of jurisdictions, for instance, children are not allowed to vote, to marry, to buy alcohol, to have sex, or to engage in paid employment. What makes children a special case for philosophical consideration is this combination of their humanity and their youth, or, more exactly, what is thought to be associated with their youth. One very obvious way in which the question of what children are entitled to do or to be or to have is raised is by asking, Do children have rights? If so, do they have all the rights that adults have and do they have rights that adults do not have? If they do not have rights how do we ensure that they are treated in the morally right way? Most jurisdictions accord children legal rights. Most countries—though not the United States of America—have ratified the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child which was first adopted in 1989. The Convention accords to children a wide range of rights including, most centrally, the right to have their ‘best interests’ be ‘a primary consideration’ in all actions concerning them, the ‘inherent right to life’, and the right of a child “who is capable of forming his or her own views … to express these views freely in all matters affecting the child”. However it is normal to distinguish between ‘positive’ rights, those that are recognised in law, and ‘moral’ rights, those that are recognised by some moral.
    Children's Rights
  •  193
    Should We Teach Patriotism?
    Studies in Philosophy and Education 18 (3): 157-173. 1999.
    This article examines a particular debate between Eamonn Callan and William Galston concerning the need for a civic education which counters the divisive pull of pluralism by uniting the citizenry in patriotic allegiance to a single national identity. The article offers a preliminary understanding of nationalism and patriotism before setting out the terms of the debate. It then critically evaluates the central idea of Callan that one might be under an obligation morally to improve one''s own pat…Read more
    This article examines a particular debate between Eamonn Callan and William Galston concerning the need for a civic education which counters the divisive pull of pluralism by uniting the citizenry in patriotic allegiance to a single national identity. The article offers a preliminary understanding of nationalism and patriotism before setting out the terms of the debate. It then critically evaluates the central idea of Callan that one might be under an obligation morally to improve one''s own patriotic inheritance, pointing to the ineliminable tension between the valuation of one''s own patria by its own terms and a detached critical reason. It concludes by suggesting that we are, in advance of our education, members of a particular patria and that any education must be particularistic. Finally, the danger is noted of presuming that, in each case, there is a single, determinate national tradition.
    PatriotismPhilosophy of Education
  •  252
    Good Sex: Perspectives on Sexual Ethics
    with Raymond A. Belliotti
    Philosophical Quarterly 45 (180): 407. 1995.
    Defining Sexual Activity
  •  403
    Why moral philosophers are not and should not be moral experts
    Bioethics 25 (3): 119-127. 2011.
    Professional philosophers are members of bioethical committees and regulatory bodies in areas of interest to bioethicists. This suggests they possess moral expertise even if they do not exercise it directly and without constraint. Moral expertise is defined, and four arguments given in support of scepticism about their possession of such expertise are considered and rejected: the existence of extreme disagreement between moral philosophers about moral matters; the lack of a means clearly to iden…Read more
    Professional philosophers are members of bioethical committees and regulatory bodies in areas of interest to bioethicists. This suggests they possess moral expertise even if they do not exercise it directly and without constraint. Moral expertise is defined, and four arguments given in support of scepticism about their possession of such expertise are considered and rejected: the existence of extreme disagreement between moral philosophers about moral matters; the lack of a means clearly to identify moral experts; that expertise cannot be claimed in that which lacks objectivity; and that ordinary people do not follow the advice of moral experts. I offer a better reason for scepticism grounded in the relation between moral philosophy and common-sense morality: namely that modern moral philosophy views even a developed moral theory as ultimately anchored in common-sense morality, that set of basic moral precepts which ordinary individuals have command of and use to regulate their own lives. Even if moral philosophers do nevertheless have a limited moral expertise, in that they alone can fully develop a set of moral judgments, I sketch reasons – grounded in the values of autonomy and of democracy – why moral philosophers should not wish non-philosophers to defer to their putative expertise.
    Autonomy in Applied EthicsNeuroethics
  •  1
    Michael Walzer, On Toleration
    Radical Philosophy. forthcoming.
    The Concept of TolerationHistory: TolerationDefenses of TolerationToleration in Normative Theories
  •  1
    Children and Political Theory (edited book)
    with Colin Macleod
    Oxford University Press. 2002.
    Political TheoryChildren's Rights
  • Sartre is Dead
    Radical Philosophy 25 1. 1980.
    Jean-Paul Sartre
  •  61
    The Non‐Identity Problem and the Ethics of Future People by David Boonin, 2014 Oxford, Oxford University Press320 pp., £45.00
    Journal of Applied Philosophy 33 (1): 110-112. 2016.
    Biomedical Ethics
  • Liberty Liberating Cyberspace: Civil Liberties, Human Rights & The Internet (review)
    Ends and Means 3 (1). 1998.
    Civil and Political RightsFreedom and Liberty
  • Anne Phillips, Democracy and Difference
    Radical Philosophy. forthcoming.
  • Rosen, M.-On Voluntary Servitude, False Consciousness and the Theory of Ideology
    Philosophical Books 38 276-278. 1997.
    Karl Marx
  • Freud or Fraud? (review)
    Radical Philosophy 42 33. 1986.
  • The Family in the Age of Biotechnology (review)
    Radical Philosophy 77. 1996.
    Biotechnology Ethics
  •  74
    Just rules?
    Res Publica 7 (2): 207-215. 2001.
    Political TheoryPhilosophy of Law
  • A Companion To Philosophy Of Law And Legal Theory (review)
    Radical Philosophy 88. 1998.
    Philosophy of LawThe Nature of Law and Legal Systems
  •  49
    Political philosophy
    with Peter Johnson
    Philosophical Books 46 (2): 178-182. 2005.
    Social and Political PhilosophyPolitical Theory
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