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52Must Morality Motivate?Danish Yearbook of Philosophy 37 (1): 7-35. 2002.Internalism – here the view that moral judgments entail motivation – is often taken to support non-cognitivism about morality. However, Michael Smith has defended a variety of it in combination with a cognitivist account of morality. Despite the eminence of Smith’s contribution, his case in favour of internalism is flawed. I distinguish several internalist positions and argue that Smith’s version, unlike standard ones, expresses a view about, not the nature of the state one is in when one makes …Read more
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116Discrimination and the aim of proportional representationPolitics, Philosophy and Economics 7 (2): 159-182. 2008.Many organizations, companies, and so on are committed to certain representational aims as regards the composition of their workforce. One motivation for such aims is the assumption that numerical underrepresentation of groups manifests discrimination against them. In this article, I articulate representational aims in a way that best captures this rationale. My main claim is that the achievement of such representational aims is reducible to the elimination of the effects of wrongful discriminat…Read more
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198Kamm on inviolability and agent-relative restrictionsRes Publica 15 (2): 165-178. 2009.Agent-relative restrictions prohibit minimizing violations: that is, they require us not to minimize the total number of their violations by violating them ourselves. Frances Kamm has explained this prohibition in terms of the moral worth of persons, which, in turn, she explains in terms of persons’ high moral status as inviolable beings. I press the following criticism of this account: even if minimizing violations are permissible, we need not have a lower moral status provided other determinan…Read more
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820Ethics, organ donation and tax: a proposalJournal of Medical Ethics 38 (8): 451-457. 2012.Next SectionFive arguments are presented in favour of the proposal that people who opt in as organ donors should receive a tax break. These arguments appeal to welfare, autonomy, fairness, distributive justice and self-ownership, respectively. Eight worries about the proposal are considered in this paper. These objections focus upon no-effect and counter-productiveness, the Titmuss concern about social meaning, exploitation of the poor, commodification, inequality and unequal status, the notion …Read more
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156Inequality, incentives and the interpersonal testRatio 21 (4): 421-439. 2008.This article defends three claims: even if Rawls' difference principle permits incentives to induce talented people to be more productive, it does not follow that it permits inequalities; the difference principle, when adequately specified, may in some circumstances permit incentives and allow that the worst off are not made as well off as they could be; and an argument for incentives might pass Cohen's interpersonal test even if it is unsound and might not pass it even if it is sound. 1
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25The posthuman condition: ethics, aesthetics and politics of biotechnological challenges (edited book)Aarhus University Press ;. 2012.If biotechnology can be used to "upgrade" humans physically and mentally, should it be done? And if so, to what extent? How will biotechnology affect societal cohesion, and can the development be controlled? Or is this a Pandora's box that should remain closed? These are just a few of the many questions that arise as a result of the increasing ability of technology to change biology and, eventually, transform human living conditions. This development has created a new horizon of a posthuman futu…Read more
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112Understanding ParticularismTheoria 71 (2): 118-137. 2005.Adherents of particularism draw rather strong implications of this view. However, particularism has never been stated in a canonical way. We locate the core of particularism as a claim about how different reasons combine to generate the Tightness or wrongness of an action. Using the notion of an ordering of alternatives containing separable factors, we show that particularism can be stated more generally as the denial that there exist separable factors.With this definition in place, we show that…Read more
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55Review of Jon Mandle, Rawls's a Theory of Justice: An Introduction (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2010 (5). 2010.
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84Genetic Discrimination and Health InsuranceRes Publica 21 (2): 185-199. 2015.According to US law, insurance companies can lawfully differentiate individual health insurance premiums on the basis of non-genetic medical information, but not on the basis of genetic information. The article reviews the case for such genetic exceptionalism. First, I critically assess some standard justifications. Next, I scrutinize an argument appealing to the view that genetically based premium differentiation expresses that persons do not all merit equal concern and respect. In the final se…Read more
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26Does Moral Responsibility Presuppose Alternate Possibilities?In A. Van den Beld (ed.), Moral Responsibility and Ontology, Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 89--101. 2000.
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170Luck-Egalitarianism: Faults and Collective ChoiceEconomics and Philosophy 27 (2): 151-173. 2011.A standard formulation of luck-egalitarianism says that ‘it is [in itself] bad – unjust and unfair – for some to be worse off than others [through no fault or choice of their own]’, where ‘fault or choice’ means substantive responsibility-generating fault or choice. This formulation is ambiguous: one ambiguity concerns the possible existence of a gap between what is true of each worse-off individual and what is true of the group of worse-off individuals, fault or choice-wise, the other concerns …Read more
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72Benjamin Eidelson, Discrimination and Disrespect: Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015. Hardcover € 48,30. pp. 267Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 20 (2): 451-454. 2017.
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154Vote Buying and Election Promises: Should Democrats Care About the Difference?Journal of Political Philosophy 19 (2): 125-144. 2011.
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177Legitimate allocation of public healthcare: Beyond accountability for reasonablenessPublic Health Ethics 2 (1): 59-69. 2009.PhD, Institute of Public Health, Unit of Medical Philosophy and Clinical Theory, University of Copenhagen, Øster Farimagsgade 5, P.O. Box 2099 1014 Copenhagen. Tel: +45 30 32 33 63; Email: s.lauridsen{at}pubhealth.ku.dk ' + u + '@ ' + d + ' '/ /- ->Citizens’ consent to political decisions is often regarded as a necessary condition of political legitimacy. Consequently, legitimate allocation of healthcare has seemed almost unattainable in contemporary pluralistic societies. The problem is that ci…Read more
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335Intentions and Discrimination in HiringJournal of Moral Philosophy 9 (1): 55-74. 2012.Fundamentally, intentions do not matter to the permissibility of actions, according to Thomas Scanlon (among others). Yet, discriminatory intentions seem essential to certain kinds of direct discrimination in hiring and firing, and appear to be something by virtue of which, in part at least, these kinds of discrimination are morally impermissible. Scanlon's account of the wrongness of discrimination attempts to accommodate this appearance through the notion of the expressive meaning of discrimin…Read more
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188Scanlon on the Doctrine of Double EffectSocial Theory and Practice 36 (4): 541-564. 2010.In recent work, T.M. Scanlon has unsuccessfully challenged the doctrine of double effect (DDE). First, comparing actions reflecting faulty moral deliberations and involving merely foreseen harm with actions reflecting less faulty moral deliberations involving intended harm suggests that proponents of DDE do not confuse the critical and the deliberative uses of moral principles. Second, Scanlon submits that it is odd to say to a deliberating agent that the permissibility of the actions she ponder…Read more
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430An introduction to contemporary egalitarianismIn Nils Holtug & Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen (eds.), Egalitarianism: new essays on the nature and value of equality, Clarendon Press. pp. 1--37. 2007.
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76On Denying A Significant Version Of The Constancy AssumptionTheoria 65 (2-3): 90-113. 1999.With regard to intrinsically morally relevant factors it is natural to suppose that if a variation in a given factor makes a moral difference anywhere, then it makes the same moral difference everywhere (henceforth: the constancy assumption). Jonathan Dancy (and other moral particularists) reject the constancy assumption. Partly on the basis thereof, they infer that ethical decisions should be made “case by case, without the comforting support of moral principles”. In this article, I challenge D…Read more
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220Moral Status and the Impermissibility of Minimizing ViolationsPhilosophy and Public Affairs 25 (4): 333-351. 1996.
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116Desert, Bell Motion, and FairnessCriminal Law and Philosophy 10 (3): 639-655. 2016.In this critical review, I address two themes from Shelly Kagan’s path-breaking The Geometry of Desert. First I explain the so-called “bell motion” of desert mountains—a notion reflecting that, ceteris paribus, as people get more virtuous it becomes more important not to give them too little of whatever they deserve than not to give them too much. Having argued that Kagan’s defense of it is unsatisfactory, I offer two objections to the existence of the bell motion. Second, I take up an unrelated…Read more
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1219Immigrants, Multiculturalism, and Expensive Cultural Tastes: Quong on Luck Egalitarianism and Cultural Minority RightsLes ateliers de l'éthique/The Ethics Forum 6 (2): 176-192. 2011.Kymlicka has offered an influential luck egalitarian justification for a catalogue of polyethnic rights addressing cultural disadvantages of immigrant minorities. In response, Quong argues that while the items on the list are justified, in the light of the fact that the relevant disadvantages of immigrants result from their choice to immigrate, (i) these rights cannot be derived from luck egalitarianism and (ii) that this casts doubt on luck egalitarianism as a theory of cultural justice. As an …Read more
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131Two puzzles for deontologists: Life-prolonging killings and the moral symmetry between killing and causing a person to be unconscious (review)The Journal of Ethics 5 (4): 385-410. 2001.Some form of agent-relative constraint against the killing of innocent personsis a central principle in deontological moraltheories. In this article I make two claimsabout this constraint. First, I argue that somekillings of innocents performed incircumstances usually not taken to exculpatethe killer are not even pro tanto wrong.Second, I contend that either there is noagent-relative constraint against the killingof innocents or this constraint has a verydifferent shape from that which deontolog…Read more
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87Hurley on reason‐responsiveness, regression, and responsibilityPhilosophical Books 46 (3): 199-209. 2005.