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David Archard

Lancaster UniversityQueen's University, Belfast
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    223
    • Most Recent
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    • 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)
  •  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
  • 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.
  •  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
  • 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
  • Political Liberalism (review)
    Radical Philosophy 66. 1994.
    Political Liberalism
  •  81
    Do parents own their children?
    International Journal of Children's Rights 1 (3-4): 293-301. 1993.
    Ethics
  • 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
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