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Jonathan Dancy

University of Texas at Austin
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    227
    • Most Recent
    • Most Downloaded
    • Topics
  •  Events
    13
  •  News and Updates
    19

 More details
  • University of Texas at Austin
    Department of Philosophy
    Professor (Part-time)
Email (login required)
Areas of Specialization
Value Theory
Metaphysics and Epistemology
Areas of Interest
Value Theory
  • All publications (227)
  •  1
    A Companion to Epistemology
    Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 56 (2): 380-381. 1994.
  • Two Conceptions of Moral Realism
    In James Rachels (ed.), Ethical Theory 1: The Question of Objectivity, Oxford University Press. 1998.
  •  115
    Practical Shape: A Theory of Practical Reasoning
    Oxford University Press USA. 2018.
    Jonathan Dancy aims to establish the possibility of reasoning to action, by showing how similar it is to reasoning to belief. He offers a general theory of reasoning, which smoothly admits the differences there may be between the two types, while also considering the possibility of reasoning to hope, to fear, to doubt, and to intention.
    Reasoning
  •  156
    Human Agency: Language, Duty, and Value
    with Lynd Forguson, J. M. E. Moravcsik, and C. C. W. Taylor
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 48 (1): 97. 1990.
    Aesthetics
  • Philosophical Dialogues: Plato, Hume, Wittgenstein
    . 1995.
    Hume and Other Philosophers
  •  4
    Introduction to Contemporary Epistemology
    Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 179 (4): 649-649. 1985.
    Continental Philosophy
  •  55
    Review: G F Schueler, Reasons and purposes, and David-Hillel Ruben, Action and its explanation. Oxford University Press; Clarendon Press 2003 (review)
  •  81
    Review: Sean McKeever and Michael Ridge, Principled ethics: generalism as a regulative ideal. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2006 (review)
    Moral GeneralismMoral Particularism
  •  2
    R.C. Stalnaker, Inquiry (review)
    Philosophy in Review 6 363-366. 1986.
    Intentionality
  •  59
    Getting off the moral Hook
    Philosophical Books 31 (4): 193-200. 1992.
    American Pragmatism
  •  110
    Beyond the Call of Duty: Supererogation, Obligation and Offence
    Philosophical Books 34 (1): 48-49. 1993.
    Supererogation
  •  123
    Non-consequentialist reasons
    Philosophical Papers 20 (2): 97-112. 1991.
    No abstract
    Ethics
  •  74
    Review of "Epistemology and Cognition" by Alvin Goldman
    Mind and Language 2 (3): 270-276. 1987.
    Book Reviewed in this Article: Epistemology and Cognition. By Alvin I. Goldman. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1986. pp. ix + 437. £23.50.
    Reduction in Cognitive ScienceReliabilism
  •  221
    Review: The Practice of Value (review)
    Mind 114 (453): 189-192. 2005.
    Value Theory, Miscellaneous
  •  131
    Book reviews (review)
    Mind 103 (410): 214-216. 1994.
  •  196
    Externalism for internalists
    Philosophical Issues 2 93-114. 1992.
    Epistemic Internalism and ExternalismIntentionalityContent Internalism and Externalism
  •  1
    Perceptual knowledge
    Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 179 (4): 647-649. 1989.
    Continental PhilosophyPerception and Knowledge, Misc
  •  268
    Can a Particularist Learn the Difference Between Right and Wrong?
    The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 1 59-72. 1999.
    This paper is an attempt to answer the charge that extreme moral particularism is unable to explain the possibility of moral concepts and our ability to acquire them. This charge is based on the claim that we acquire moral concepts from experience of instances, and that the sorts of similarities that there must be between the instances are ones that only a generalist can countenance. I argue that this inference is unsound.
    Moral ParticularismMoral Judgment, Misc
  •  23
    Book Reviews (review)
    Mind 95 (378): 263-265. 1986.
  •  29
    Book reviews (review)
    Mind 92 (366): 288-291. 1983.
  •  314
    Human agency: language, duty, and value: philosophical essays in honor of J.O. Urmson (edited book)
    with J. O. Urmson, J. M. E. Moravcsik, and C. C. W. Taylor
    Stanford University Press. 1988.
    The essays in this volume explore current work in central areas of philosophy, work unified by attention to salient questions of human action and human agency. They ask what it is for humans to act knowledgeably, to use language, to be friends, to act heroically, to be mortally fortunate, and to produce as well as to appreciate art. The volume is dedicated to J. O. Urmson, in recognition of his inspirational contributions to these areas. All the essays but one have been specially written for thi…Read more
    The essays in this volume explore current work in central areas of philosophy, work unified by attention to salient questions of human action and human agency. They ask what it is for humans to act knowledgeably, to use language, to be friends, to act heroically, to be mortally fortunate, and to produce as well as to appreciate art. The volume is dedicated to J. O. Urmson, in recognition of his inspirational contributions to these areas. All the essays but one have been specially written for this volume.
    Philosophy, General WorksEthics
  •  142
    Intention and Permissibility
    with T. M. Scanlon
    Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 74 301-338. 2000.
    It is clearly impermissible to kill one person because his organs can be used to save five others who are in need of transplants. It has seemed to many that the explanation for this lies in the fact that in such cases we would be intending the death of the person whom we killed, or failed to save. What makes these actions impermissible, however, is not the agent's intention but rather the fact that the benefit envisaged does not justify an exception to the prohibition against killing or the requ…Read more
    It is clearly impermissible to kill one person because his organs can be used to save five others who are in need of transplants. It has seemed to many that the explanation for this lies in the fact that in such cases we would be intending the death of the person whom we killed, or failed to save. What makes these actions impermissible, however, is not the agent's intention but rather the fact that the benefit envisaged does not justify an exception to the prohibition against killing or the requirement to give aid. The difference between this explanation and one appealing to intention is easily overlooked if one fails to distinguish between the prospective use of a moral principle to guide action and its retrospective use to appraise the way an agent governed him or herself. Even if this explanation is accepted, however, it remains an open question whether and how an agent's intention may be relevant to the permissibility of actions in other cases. \\\ [Jonathan Dancy] My first four sections concentrate on the second section of Professor Scanlon's contribution, where he lays out his conception of moral principles and of the role they play in theory and practice. I will raise questions on the following issues: 1. Scanlon's initial introduction of the notion of a principle. 2. His rejection of the standard view that principles are concerned with the forbidding, permitting and requiring of actions. 3. His rejection of pro tanto conceptions of principles in favour of a conception of them as conclusive. 4. The resulting account of what it is for a principle to face and survive exceptions. Scanlon's discussion of these matters here both appeals to and is in some respects more detailed than the relevant section of his recent What We Owe to Each Other. The topic is interesting both for the role played by principles in Scanlon's present discussion of intention and permissibility, and more generally because of his account of wrongness: an act is wrong iff it is ruled out by principles that nobody could reasonably reject. The remainder of my contribution is concerned with the ostensible focus of IP, namely the relevance of agent-intentions to the permissibility of what is done.
  •  154
    Reading Parfit
    Erkenntnis 49 (2): 237-242. 1998.
    Personal Identity and Values
  •  209
    On how to be a moral rationalist
    Philosophical Books 47 (2): 103-110. 2006.
    Moral RationalismEpistemological States and Properties
  •  144
    Real values in a Humean context
    Ratio 9 (2): 171-183. 1996.
    Hume: Metaphysics and Epistemology
  •  169
    Wiggins and Ross
    Utilitas 10 (3): 281-285. 1998.
    Ross's attempt to undermine the consequentialist understanding of the relation between duties and outcomes might give him greater defence against the danger that outcome-related duties will come to constitute a norm, to the disadvantage of all others
    Topics in Consequentialism
  •  76
    Human Morality By Samuel Scheffler (Oxford University Press, 1992) pp. 150, £22.50
    Philosophy 68 (264): 252-. 1993.
    Ethics
  •  359
    In Defense of Thick Concepts
    Midwest Studies in Philosophy 20 (1): 263-279. 1995.
    Ethics
  •  169
    Mill's Puzzling Footnote
    Utilitas 12 (2): 219. 2000.
    This paper discusses various possible interpretations of a complex footnote in Mill's Utilitarianism
    Topics in Consequentialism
  •  158
    Defending Particularism
    Metaphilosophy 30 (1&2): 25-32. 1999.
    In this brief response I argue that Sinnott‐Armstrong has underestimated the complexities that moral principles will have to circumvent if they are to survive particularist criticism. I also argue that we cannot yet accept Gert's accounts of moral relevance and of how a sound moral rule can survive exceptions.
    Moral Particularism
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