•  56
    Review essay: John Rawls's last word
    Philosophy of the Social Sciences 39 (1): 107-114. 2009.
    Although no one can deny the profound importance of John Rawls's work in political philosophy, which covered both an original theory of justice and extensive work and teaching on the history of moral and political philosophy, we are now at the point where his contributions more clearly suggest certain historical limitations. Such topics as gender justice, racial justice, and environmental justice figured in Rawls's work only belatedly and in less than satisfactory ways. Surely the wide influence…Read more
  •  1
    Martha Nussbaum
    The Philosophers' Magazine 36 82-83. 2006.
  •  40
    Jeremy Bentham
    The Philosophers' Magazine 26 52-52. 2004.
  •  12
    Utilitarianism and Empire (edited book)
    Lexington Books. 2005.
    The classical utilitarian legacy of Jeremy Bentham, J. S. Mill, James Mill, and Henry Sidgwick has often been charged with both theoretical and practical complicity in the growth of British imperialism and the emerging racialist discourse of the nineteenth century. But there has been little scholarly work devoted to bringing together the conflicting interpretive perspectives on this legacy and its complex evolution with respect to orientalism and imperialism. This volume, with contributions by l…Read more
  •  98
    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
  • Russell Hardin, One For All (review)
    Philosophy in Review 15 398-403. 1995.
  •  7
    Ethical Explorations (review)
    The Philosophers' Magazine 12 57-57. 2000.
  •  106
    Obama's political philosophy: Pragmatism, politics, and the university of chicago
    Philosophy of the Social Sciences 39 (2): 127-173. 2009.
    In early work, I argued that Barack Obama, the 44th president of the United States, often represented, in his political speeches and writings, a form of philosophical pragmatism with special relations to the University of Chicago and its reform tradition. That form of pragmatism, especially evident in the work of such early figures as John Dewey and Jane Addams, and such later figures as Saul Alinsky, Abner Mikva, David Greenstone, Richard Rorty, Danielle Allen, and Cass Sunstein, contributed gr…Read more
  •  16
    Book Review:Democracy and Technology. Richard E. Sclove (review)
    Ethics 107 (2): 364-. 1997.
  •  27
    Larmore and Rawls
    Philosophy of the Social Sciences 29 (1): 89-120. 1999.
  • Henry Sidgwick, Essays on Ethics and Method Reviewed by
    Philosophy in Review 21 (6): 439-442. 2001.
  •  51
  •  63
    Henry Sidgwick has gone down in the history of philosophy as both the great, classical utilitarian moral theorist who authoredThe Methods of Ethics, and an outstanding exemplar of intellectual honesty and integrity, one whose personal virtues were inseparable from his philosophical strengths and method. Yet this construction of Sidgwick the philosopher has been based on a too limited understanding of Sidgwick's casuistry and leading practical ethical concerns. As his friendship with John Addingt…Read more
  •  28
    Review essay: Mr. Smith does not go to Washington
    Philosophy of the Social Sciences 37 (3): 366-386. 2007.
    A recent spate of books on the life and legacy of the political philosopher Leo Strauss, notably Steven B. Smith's Reading Leo Strauss: Politics, Philosophy, and Judaism , suggests a desperate effort to salvage Strauss and the Straussian school of political philosophy from the wreckage of American neoconservatism. Although a number of these works are quite thoughtful and helpfully counter many of the more extreme (and uglier) charges made concerning the meaning of Straussianism and its political…Read more
  •  6
    Martha Nussbaum
    The Philosophers' Magazine 36 82-83. 2006.
  •  1
    Jeremy Bentham
    The Philosophers' Magazine 26 52-52. 2004.
  •  17
    Underivative Duty: British Moral Philosophers from Sidgwick to Ewing
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 20 (6): 1223-1226. 2012.
    No abstract
  •  15
    Henry Sidgwick was one of the great intellectual figures of nineteenth-century Britain. He was first and foremost a great moral philosopher, whose masterwork The Methods of Ethics is still widely studied today. He also wrote on economics, politics, education and literature. He was deeply involved in the founding of the first college for women at the University of Cambridge. He was also much concerned with the sexual politics of his close friend John Addington Symonds, a pioneer of gay studies. T…Read more
  •  75
    Martha Nussbaum
    The Philosophers' Magazine 36 (36): 82-83. 2006.
  •  71
    Sidgwick's Feminism
    Utilitas 12 (3): 379. 2000.
    Henry Sidgwick shared many of the feminist concerns of John Stuart Mill and was an active reformer in the cause of higher education for women, but his feminism has never received the attention it deserves and he has in recent times been criticized for promulgating a masculinist epistemology. This essay is a prolegomenon to a comprehensive account of Sidgwick's feminism, briefly setting out various elements of his views on epistemology, equality, gender, and sexuality in order to provide some ini…Read more
  •  15
    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