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82Geoengineering, Ocean Fertilization, and the Problem of Permissible PollutionScience, Technology, and Human Values 36 (2): 190--212. 2011.Many geoengineering projects have been proposed to address climate change, including both solar radiation management and carbon removal techniques. Some of these methods would introduce additional compounds into the atmosphere or the ocean. This poses a difficult conundrum: Is it permissible to remediate one pollutant by introducing a second pollutant into a system that has already been damaged, threatened, or altered? We frame this conundrum as the ‘‘Problem of Permissible Pollution.’’ In this …Read more
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154Culpability and Blame after Pregnancy LossJournal of Medical Ethics 33 (1): 24-27. 2007.The problem of feeling guilty about a pregnancy loss is suggested to be primarily a moral matter and not a medical or psychological one. Two standard approaches to women who blame themselves for a loss are first introduced, characterised as either psychologistic or deterministic. Both these approaches are shown to underdetermine the autonomy of the mother by depending on the notion that the mother is not culpable for the loss if she "could not have acted otherwise". The inability to act otherwis…Read more
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110Non-Identity for Non-HumansEthical Theory and Moral Practice 19 (5): 1165-1185. 2016.This article introduces a non-human version of the non-identity problem and suggests that such a variation exposes weaknesses in several proposed person-focused solutions to the classic version of the problem. It suggests first that person-affecting solutions fail when applied to non-human animals and, second, that many common moral arguments against climate change should be called into question. We argue that a more inclusive version of the person-affecting principle, which we call the ‘patient…Read more
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28TakingsIn Baird Callicott & Robert Frodeman (eds.), Encyclopedia of Environmental Ethics and Philosophy: Abbey to Israel, Macmillan Reference. 2008.
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92Open to debate: Moral consideration and the lab monkeyAmerican Journal of Bioethics 8 (6). 2008.No abstract
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137Ethics, Policy & Environment : A New Name and a Renewed MissionEthics, Policy and Environment 14 (1): 1-2. 2011.Readers of Ethics, Place & Environment will notice at least one major change in this inaugural 2011 issue. Namely, we are no longer operating under the same name. At the Eastern Division American P...
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360What's so moral about the moral hazard?Public Affairs Quarterly 23 (1): 1-26. 2009.A "moral hazard" is a market failure most commonly associated with insurance, but also associated by extension with a wide variety of public policy scenarios, from environmental disaster relief, to corporate bailouts, to natural resource policy, to health insurance. Specifically, the term "moral hazard" describes the danger that, in the face of insurance, an agent will increase her exposure to risk. If not immediately clear, such terminology invokes a moral notion, suggesting that changing one's…Read more
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42The Routledge Companion to Environmental Ethics (edited book)Routledge. 2022._The Routledge Companion to Environmental Ethics_ is comprised of sixty original essays, which focus on how ethical questions intersect with real and pressing policy issues. Rather than overviewing abstract conceptual categories, the authors focus on specific controversies involving the environment. Clearly written contributions on Fossil Fuels, Urban Sustainability, Novel Ecosystems, and many other subjects make accessible these issues‘ empirical and political dimensions as well as their theore…Read more
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182Identity crisis: Face recognition technology and freedom of the willEthics, Place and Environment 8 (2). 2005.In this paper I present the position that the use of face recognition technology (FRT) in law enforcement and in business is restrictive of individual autonomy. I reason that FRT severely undermines autonomous self-determination by hobbling the idea of freedom of the will. I distinguish this position from two other common arguments against surveillance technologies: the privacy argument (that FRT is an invasion of privacy) and the objective freedom argument (that FRT is restrictive of one's free…Read more
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53Choosing to SleepIn Angus Dawson (ed.), The Philosophy of Public Health, Ashgate. 2009.In this paper we claim that individual subjects do not have so much control over sleep that it is aptly characterized as a personal choice; and that normative implications related to public health and sleep hygiene do not necessarily follow from current findings. It should be true of any empirical study that normative implications do not necessarily follow, but we think that many public health sleep recommendations falsely infer these implications from a flawed explanatory account of the decisio…Read more
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125Philosophy Looks at Chess (edited book)Open Court Press. 2008.This book offers a collection of contemporary essays that explore philosophical themes at work in chess. This collection includes essays on the nature of a game, the appropriateness of chess as a metaphor for life, and even deigns to query whether Garry Kasparov might—just might—be a cyborg. In twelve unique essays, contributed by philosophers with a broad range of expertise in chess, this book poses both serious and playful questions about this centuries-old pastime. Perhaps more interestingly,…Read more
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108Fukushima Daiichi, Normal Accidents, and Moral Responsibility: Ethical Questions about Nuclear EnergyEthics, Policy and Environment 14 (3). 2011.Ethics, Policy & Environment, Volume 14, Issue 3, Page 263-265, October 2011
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109What we want animals to want (review)American Journal of Bioethics 4 (4): 83-85. 2004.No abstract
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123Risk, Judgment and Fairness in Research IncentivesAmerican Journal of Bioethics 7 (2): 82-83. 2007.No abstract
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233The moral considerability of invasive transgenic animalsJournal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 19 (4): 337-366. 2006.The term moral considerability refers to the question of whether a being or set of beings is worthy of moral consideration. Moral considerability is most readily afforded to those beings that demonstrate the clearest relationship to rational humans, though many have also argued for and against the moral considerability of species, ecosystems, and “lesser” animals. Among these arguments there are at least two positions: “environmentalist” positions that tend to emphasize the systemic relations be…Read more
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154Private property and environmental ethics:. Some new directionsMetaphilosophy 39 (3). 2008.This article argues that teachers of environmental ethics must more aggressively entertain questions of private property in their work and in their teaching. To make this case, it first introduces the three primary positions on property: occupation arguments, labor theory of value arguments, and efficiency arguments. It then contextualizes these arguments in light of the contemporary U.S. wise-use movement, in an attempt to make sense of the concerns that motivate wise-use activists, and also to…Read more
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University of Colorado, BoulderAssistant Professor
Boulder, Colorado, United States of America
PhilPapers Editorships
| Environmental Philosophy |