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196Patriotism, War, and the Limits of Permissible PartialityThe Journal of Ethics 13 (4): 401-422. 2009.This paper examines whether patriotism and other forms of group partiality can be justified and what are the moral limits on actions performed to benefit countries and other groups. In particular, I ask whether partiality toward one’s country can justify attacking enemy civilians to achieve victory or other political goals. Using a rule utilitarian approach, I then defend the legitimacy of “moderate” patriotic partiality but argue that noncombatant immunity imposes an absolute constraint on what…Read more
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108John Stuart Mill on Economic Justice and the Alleviation of PovertyJournal of Social Philosophy 43 (2): 161-176. 2012.
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145Deen K. Chatterjee (ed.), The ethics of assistance: Morality and the distant needy (cambridge: Cambridge university press, 2004), pp. XI + 292 (review)Utilitas 19 (2): 264-266. 2007.
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753Utilitarianism, Act and RuleInternet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2014.Act and Rule Utilitarianism Utilitarianism is one of the best known and most influential moral theories. Like other forms of consequentialism, its core idea is that whether actions are morally right or wrong depends on their effects. More specifically, the only effects of actions that are relevant are the good and bad results that they […].
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172Terrorism and the Ethics of WarCambridge University Press. 2010.Stephen Nathanson argues that we cannot have morally credible views about terrorism if we focus on terrorism alone and neglect broader issues about the ethics ...
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105Claudia Card, Confronting Evils: Terrorism, Torture, GenocideJournal of Moral Philosophy 9 (4): 600-602. 2012.
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74Russell's Scientific MysticismRussell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 5 (1): 14-25. 1985.
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48What Is and What Ought to Be Done (review)International Philosophical Quarterly 22 (3): 211-212. 1982.
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115Is Terrorism, or War, Ever Justified? Comment on Nathanson’s Terrorism and the Ethics of WarSocial Philosophy Today 28 177-185. 2012.Nathanson asks how we can properly understand terrorism such that it is (a) always unjustified, and (b) does not thereby preclude justified warfare. By means of a novel ruleutilitarian argument bolstering the inviolability of noncombatants, he hopes to have crafted such an understanding. While praising Nathanson’s rigor and originality, this paper questions the moral-theoretic completeness of his procedure, and then raises challenges from two directions: (1) an argument for the justifiability of…Read more
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136‘Partiality’, by Keller, Simon: Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2013, pp. vii-x + 163, $35 (US dollars) [hardback]Australasian Journal of Philosophy 92 (3): 593-596. 2014.
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James C. S. Wernham, "James's Will-to-Believe Doctrine: A Heretical View" (review)Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 24 (3): 423. 1988.
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71Reviews (review)Metaphilosophy 8 (2‐3): 201-214. 2007.The Owl of Minerva: Philosophers on Philosophy. Edited by Charles J. Bontempo and S. Jack Odell Harry M. Bracken. Berkeley. Jonathan Bennett. Kant's Dialectic.
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1The Plight of the Siamese Twin: Mind, Body, and Value in John Barth's "Petition"Analecta Husserliana 28 (n/a): 461. 1990.
Areas of Specialization
| Applied Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| Applied Ethics |
| Normative Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |