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2044The Worseness of NonexistenceIn Solberg Gamlund and (ed.), Saving lives from the badness of death, Oxford University Press. pp. 215-228. 2019.Most believe that it is worse for a person to die than to continue to exist with a good life. At the same time, many believe that it is not worse for a merely possible person never to exist than to exist with a good life. I argue that if the underlying properties that make us the sort of thing we essentially are can come in small degrees, then to maintain this commonly-held pair of beliefs we will have to embrace an implausible sort of evaluative hypersensitivity to slight nonevaluative differen…Read more
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1771Does Division Multiply Desert?Philosophical Review 123 (1): 43-77. 2014.It seems plausible that (i) how much punishment a person deserves cannot be affected by the mere existence or nonexistence of another person. We might have also thought that (ii) how much punishment is deserved cannot increase merely in virtue of personal division. I argue that (i) and (ii) are inconsistent with the popular belief that, other things being equal, when people culpably do very wrong or bad acts, they ought to be punished for this—even if they have repented, are now virtuous, and pu…Read more
St Andrews, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Specialization
| Normative Ethics |
| Value Theory |
| Metaphysics |
| Applied Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |