•  126
    Editor's introduction
    The Journal of Ethics 3 (4): 1-2. 1999.
  •  97
    Editor's introduction
    The Journal of Ethics 7 (1): 1-2. 2003.
  •  165
    Economic Exploitation in Intercollegiate Athletics
    Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 7 (3): 295-312. 2013.
    This paper investigates philosophically the question of whether or not college and university athletes in the USA are doing something morally wrong should they terminate their college or university experience prior to graduation and enter the professional athletic ranks. Various moral arguments are brought to bear in order to attempt to shed light on this issue. One reason why such athletes?turn professional? before they graduate is the perceived economic exploitation they experience as essentia…Read more
  •  212
    Editor-In-Chief’s Introduction
    The Journal of Ethics 11 (3): 237-237. 2007.
  •  67
    Equality and liberty: analyzing Rawls and Nozick (edited book)
    St. Martin's Press. 1991.
    Equality and Liberty: Analysing Rawls and Nozick is an indispensable source for those seriously interested in some rigorous assessments of the ideas of America's two most popular political philosophers. The essays in this volume cover a wide range of topics, some engaging each other in their analyses of particular Rawlsian or Nozickian themes. This collection of recent essays brings the student up-to-date concerning some of the more recent developments and assessments of Rawlsian and Nozickian i…Read more
  •  31
    Editor-in-Chief’s Introduction
    The Journal of Ethics 16 (2): 115-115. 2012.
  •  141
    Editor's introduction
    The Journal of Ethics 1 (1): 1-2. 1997.
  •  113
    Doping: Just Do It?
    Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 7 (4): 430-449. 2013.
    No abstract.
  •  237
    Coping with Doping
    with Vincent Brown Jr and Kiersten Kirkland
    Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 40 (1): 41-64. 2013.
    We provide a new wrinkle to the Argument from Unfair Advantage, a rather popular one in the ethics of doping in sports discussions. But we add a new argument that we believe places the moral burden on those who favor doping in sports. We also defend our position against some important concerns that might be raised against it. In the end, we argue that for the time being, doping in sports ought to be banned until it can be demonstrated that our concerns can be satisfied.
  •  282
    Evil
    Analysis 64 (1): 81-84. 2004.
  •  262
    Dawkins’ godless delusion
    International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 65 (3): 125-138. 2009.
    A philosophical assessment of Richard Dawkins’ The God Delusion, exposing some errors of reasoning that undermine part of the foundation of his atheism. Distinctions between theism, atheism and agnosticism are also provided and explored for their significance to Dawkins’ argument.
  •  195
    Divine Justice and Human Sin
    Philosophy and Theology 29 (1): 133-145. 2017.
    This paper challenges the claim that the traditional Christian (Augustinian, Thomistic, Anselmian) idea of hell as a form of eternal punishment (damnation and torment) for human sin cannot be made consistent with the idea of proportionate punishment, and it raises concerns with the notion that divine justice requires divine forgiveness and mercy. It argues that divine justice entails or at least permits retribution as the meting out of punishment by God to those who deserve it in proportion to t…Read more
  •  94
    Can terrorism be morally justified?
    Public Affairs Quarterly 10 (3): 163-184. 1996.
  •  108
    Collective punishment and public policy
    Journal of Business Ethics 11 (3): 207-216. 1992.
    In this paper I shall discuss various philosophical theories of collective punishment: marxian annihilism, metaphysical collectivism and methodological individualism. After refuting metaphysical collectivism and its modified version, I defend a modification of methodological individualism.
  •  1364
    Are Women Beach Volleyballers ‘Too Sexy for Their Shorts?’
    Symposion: Theoretical and Applied Inquiries in Philosophy and Social Sciences 4 (1): 7-15. 2017.
    This is a paper on the philosophy of sport or the ethics of sport more specifically. It provides a critical assessment of a particular feminist approach to a specific issue in the ethics of sport with regard to what some feminist scholars refer to as the ‘sexualizing’ of women in sport with particular attention paid to women beach volleyballers.
  •  110
    Corporate Responsibility for Environmental Damage
    Environmental Ethics 18 (2): 195-207. 1996.
    I set forth and defend an analysis of corporate moral responsibility (retrospective moral liability), which, I argue, ought to serve as the foundation for corporate legal responsibility, punishment, and compensation for environmental damage caused by corporations.
  •  74
    Bibliography of Joel Feinberg
    The Journal of Ethics 10 (1-2): 201-204. 2006.
  •  55
    Are Women Beach Volleyballers ‘Too Sexy for Their Shorts?’
    Symposion. Theoretical and Applied Inquiries in Philosophy and Social Sciences. forthcoming.
    J. Angelo Corlett ABSTRACT: This is a paper on the philosophy of sport or the ethics of sport more specifically. It provides a critical assessment of a particular feminist approach to a specific issue in the ethics of sport with regard to what some feminist scholars refer to as the ‘sexualizing’ of women in sport...
  •  186
    Collective moral responsibility
    Journal of Social Philosophy 32 (4). 2001.
  •  172
    Analyzing social knowledge
    Social Epistemology 21 (3). 2007.
    In the tradition of justified true belief theory, I provide an epistemic responsibility-based philosophical analysis of collective knowledge which is both coherentist and reliabilist.
  •  153
    Atheism and epistemic justification
    International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 78 (1): 91-106. 2015.
    In a recent article in this journal, Andrew Johnson seeks to defend the “New Atheism” against several objections. We provide a philosophical assessment of his defense of contemporary atheistic arguments that are said to amount to bifurcation fallacies. This point of discussion leads to our critical discussion of the presumption of atheism and the epistemic justification of atheism.
  •  101
    Analyzing racism
    Public Affairs Quarterly 12 (1): 23-50. 1998.
  •  98
    In Republic 376d, the interlocutors discuss the education of children. Much of this passage revolves around the role or function of poetry as mimesis in the polis or city-state. In 377b-378e some of the poetry of Homer, Hesiod and Pindar is deemed harmful and censored within the educational structure of the polis in virtue of its potentially deleterious effect on society.
  •  42
    Review of William J. Prior's "Unity and Development in Plato's Metaphysics"
  •  166
    A marxist approach to business ethics
    Journal of Business Ethics 17 (1): 99-103. 1998.
    This paper contains a philosophical explication of some of the essentials of a Marxist approach to business ethics. A Marxist approach is construed as a moral critique of capitalism. This paper hopes to lay the groundwork for a more detailed analysis of Karl Marx's critique of capitalist economies.