•  63
    Sidgwick
    In Jed Z. Buchwald & Robert Fox (eds.), The Oxford handbook of the history of physics, Oxford University Press. 2013.
    This chapter discusses the life and ethical philosophy of Henry Sidgwick. His masterpiece, The Methods of Ethics, first published in 1874, marks the culmination of the classical and nontheological utilitarian tradition, which took ‘the greatest happiness’ as the fundamental normative demand. Sidgwick was also a reformer who always advocated education as the crucial issue for historical progress, in ethics, economics, politics, and other areas. His practical ethics, often only indirectly utilitar…Read more
  •  66
    Although U.S. President Barack Obama has often sounded the rhetorical notes of a certain type of philosophical pragmatism, his actual policies during his presidency have to date failed to address in adequate fashion the structural inequalities that seriously compromise the American democratic potential. Thus, from the perspective of a Deweyan democratic pragmatism, which could readily side with Occupy Wall Street and related movements, the Obama presidency has yet to prove that it is truly commi…Read more
  •  69
    Larmore and Rawls
    Philosophy of the Social Sciences 29 (1): 89-120. 1999.
  •  108
    G.E. Moore
    The Philosophers' Magazine 18 53-53. 2002.
  •  246
    The methods of J. B. Schneewind
    Utilitas 16 (2): 146-167. 2004.
    J. B. Schneewind's Sidgwick's Ethics and Victorian Moral Philosophy was the single best philosophical commentary on Henry Sidgwick's Methods of Ethics produced in the twentieth century. Although Schneewind was primarily concerned to read Sidgwick's ethical theory in its historical context, as reflecting the controversies generated by such figures as J. S. Mill, F. D. Maurice, and William Whewell, his reading also ended up being highly neo-Kantian, reflecting various Rawlsian priorities. As valua…Read more
  • Henry Sidgwick, Essays on Ethics and Method (review)
    Philosophy in Review 21 439-442. 2001.
  •  56
    Nietzsche, Aesthetics and Modernity (review)
    The Philosophers' Magazine 12 57-57. 2000.
  •  49
  •  138
    Persons, selves, and utilitarianism
    Ethics 96 (4): 721-745. 1986.
  • Late Modern British Ethics
    In Hugh LaFollette (ed.), The International Encyclopedia of Ethics, Wiley-blackwell. 2013.
  •  185
    Go Tell It on the Mountain
    Philosophy of the Social Sciences 44 (2): 233-251. 2014.
    Derek Parfit’s long-awaited work On What Matters is a very ambitious, very strange production seeking to defend both a nonreductive and nonnaturalistic but nonmetaphysical and nonontological form of cognitive intuitionism or rationalism and an ethical theory (the Triple Theory) reflecting the convergence of Kantian universalizability, Scanlonian contractualism, and rule utilitarianism. Critics have already countered that Parfit’s metaethics is unbelievable and his convergence thesis unconvincing…Read more