David Miller

Nuffield College, Oxford University
  • Miller contro Miller: una polemica
    with J. Miller
    Studi di Estetica 13 191-236. 1996.
  •  18
    Personenregister
    with Julian Nida-Rümelin, Detlef von Daniels, Nicole Wloka, Rainer Forst, Wolfgang Merkel, Michael Zürn, Mattias Kumm, Etienne François, Volker Gerhardt, Almut Möller, Agnès Bénassy-Quéré, Christian Tomuschat, Regina Kreide, Véronique Zanetti, Carl Friedrich Gethmann, Georg Kamp, Silja Vöneky, Reinhard F. Hüttl, Josef Zens, Knut Kaiser, Oliver Bens, Lisa Herzog, Thomas Meyer, and Esther D. Reed
    In Julian Nida-Rümelin, Detlef Daniels & Nicole Wloka (eds.), Internationale Gerechtigkeit und institutionelle Verantwortung, De Gruyter. pp. 425-426. 2019.
  •  10
    Frontmatter
    with Julian Nida-Rümelin, Detlef von Daniels, Nicole Wloka, Rainer Forst, Wolfgang Merkel, Michael Zürn, Mattias Kumm, Etienne François, Volker Gerhardt, Almut Möller, Agnès Bénassy-Quéré, Christian Tomuschat, Regina Kreide, Véronique Zanetti, Carl Friedrich Gethmann, Georg Kamp, Silja Vöneky, Reinhard F. Hüttl, Josef Zens, Knut Kaiser, Oliver Bens, Lisa Herzog, Thomas Meyer, and Esther D. Reed
    In Julian Nida-Rümelin, Detlef Daniels & Nicole Wloka (eds.), Internationale Gerechtigkeit und institutionelle Verantwortung, De Gruyter. 2019.
  •  21
    Vorwort
    with Julian Nida-Rümelin, Detlef von Daniels, Nicole Wloka, Rainer Forst, Wolfgang Merkel, Michael Zürn, Mattias Kumm, Etienne François, Volker Gerhardt, Almut Möller, Agnès Bénassy-Quéré, Christian Tomuschat, Regina Kreide, Véronique Zanetti, Carl Friedrich Gethmann, Georg Kamp, Silja Vöneky, Reinhard F. Hüttl, Josef Zens, Knut Kaiser, Oliver Bens, Lisa Herzog, Thomas Meyer, and Esther D. Reed
    In Julian Nida-Rümelin, Detlef Daniels & Nicole Wloka (eds.), Internationale Gerechtigkeit und institutionelle Verantwortung, De Gruyter. 2019.
  •  35
    Why Political Theory Needs Empirical Social Science (edited book)
    Oxford University Press. 2026.
    Political theory promises guidance about how we ought to organize our political lives. For example, how do we fairly share resources in contexts of scarcity? What are the proper limits to democratic authority? Who should bear the costs of tackling climate change? These topics - the subject matter of normative inquiry in political theory - are commonly also the focus of social scientific research that explains and describes the political world. This raises challenging questions about the place of…Read more
  •  58
    Overcoming The Justificationist Addiction
    Studia Philosophica Wratislaviensia 3 (1): 9-18. 2008.
    It is a simple, though ancient, mistake in the theory of knowledge to think that justification, in any degree, is central to rationality, or even important to it. We must cut forever the intellectual apron strings that continue to offer us spurious and unneeded security, and replace the insoluble problem of what our theories are based on by the soluble problem of how to expose their shortcomings. The paper will outline the critical rationalism of K. Popper, taking account of some recent criticis…Read more
  •  25
    This book was written with three aims in mind. The first was to provide a reasonably concise account of Hume's social and political thought that might help students coming to it for the first time. The second aim was to say something about the relationship between philosophy and politics, with explicit attention to Hume, but implicit reference to a general issue. The third is to offer an integrated account of Hume's thought. The book accounts for the varying interpretation of the conservative an…Read more
  • Pluralism, Justice, and Equality
    Oxford University Press UK. 2005.
    The essays in this book by a group of leading political theorists assess and develop the central ideas of Michael Walzer's path-breaking Spheres of Justice. Is social justice a radically plural notion, with its principles determined by the different social goods that men and women allocate to one another? Is it possible to prevent the unequal distribution of money and power from distorting the allocation of other goods? If different goods are distributed by different mechanisms, what (if any) ki…Read more
  • Reviews (review)
    with William A. S. Sarjeant, John Forge, Nicolas Rasmussen, David Oldroyd, Thomas Nickles, Mark Cortiula, David Bloor, Robert Nola, Allan Franklin, Peter J. Riggs, Richard McDonough, Mary Chan, Lynn K. Nyhart, Yvonne Luxford, Steve Clarke, Randall Albury, Sverre Myhra, Ivan Crozier, and Kim Sterelny
    Metascience 7 (2): 331-418. 1998.
  • Neo-Kantian Theories of Self-Determination: A Critique
    Review of International Studies 42 (5): 858-75. 2016.
  •  189
    Foreword
    with Reinhard Neck and Jack Birner
    Philosophy of the Social Sciences 46 (3): 219-220. 2016.
    Karl Popper’s Objective Knowledge stands at the threshold of his last major philosophical phase, the period from his retirement from the London School of Economics in 1969 until his death in 1994. The two great books that he wrote before he came to London, Logik der Forschung and The Open Society and Its Enemies, contain much more than the innovations in the theory of scientific method and the theory of democracy for which they are famous. Logik der Forschung, translated into English as The Logi…Read more
  •  199
    The Objectives of Science
    Philosophia Scientiae 1 (11-1): 21-43. 2007.
    Contesting the common opinion that, unlike the problem of induction, the problem of demarcation is of little significance, the paper maintains that Popper’s criterion of falsifiability gives an irresistible answer to the question of what can be learnt from an empirical investigation. Everything follows from the rejection of inductive logic, together with the recognition that, before it can be empirically investigated, a hypothesis has to be formulated and accepted. Scientific hypotheses emerge n…Read more
  •  105
    A review essay of Gillian Brock Global Justice: A Cosmopolitan Account (Oxford University Press, 2009)
  •  20
    Ultra-high isotropic resolution imaging of retinal structures was made possible with an adaptive optics system using dual deformable mirrors and a Fourier-domain optical coherence tomography system with correction for longitudinal chromatic aberration. This system was used to image microscopic retinal structures of healthy as well as diseased retinas in vivo. The improved resolution and contrast enhanced visualization of morphological structures in the retina can be clearly seen. The benefits of…Read more
  •  102
    Are Cultural Rights Human Rights?: A Cosmopolitan Conception of Cultural Rights
    with Eric William Metcalfe and John Gardner
    . 2000.
    The liberal conception of the state is marked by an insistence upon the equal civil and political rights of each inhabitant. Recently, though, a number of writers have argued that this emphasis on uniform rights ignores the fact that the populations of most states are culturally diverse, and that their inhabitants have significant interests qua members of particular cultures. They argue that liberals should recognize special, group-based cultural rights as a necessary part of a theory of justice…Read more
  •  97
    Kant, the Nation-State, and Immigration
    Kantian Review 30 (1): 45-61. 1994.
    Kant is invariably read by his followers as antipathetic to all forms of nationalism. Yet he was interested in differences of national character and used an organic metaphor to explain why states should not be broken up or annexed (unfortunately he never commented explicitly on the dismemberment of Poland by Prussia and its allies). He favoured a plural world in which national differences of language and religion prevented the emergence of despotic world government. So his acknowledgement of a l…Read more
  •  114
    Review Symposium (review)
    with Joseph Carens, Rainer Bauböck, and Arash Abizadeh
    Political Theory 43 (3): 380-411. 2015.
  •  93
    What Use Is Empirical Confirmation?
    Economics and Philosophy 12 (2): 197. 1996.
    1. Despite the plain fact that there is nothing in this world that can be proved without reliance on some assumption or another, there is an inalienable difference between an argument that begins by assuming what it is designed to establish and one that begins by assuming the contradictory of what it is designed to establish. Arguments of the first kind are uncontroversially acknowledged to be circular, or question-begging; though valid they achieve nothing. Those of the second kind conform to t…Read more
  •  30
    The burden of this theorem, stated informally, is that when a hypothesis h is maximally independent of the evidence — that is, it goes wholly beyond the evidence —, then the probability p(h, e) increases when the evidence e is weakened; and hence, the weaker is the evidence, the greater is the probabilistic support.
  •  1
    Social Justice
    Political Theory 5 (2): 261-264. 1977.
  •  88
    Republicanism, national identity and Europe
    In Cecile Laborde & John Maynor (eds.), Republicanism and Political Theory, Wiley-blackwell. pp. 145. 2009.
  • Pluralism, Justice, and Equality
    Philosophical Quarterly 48 (192): 397-398. 1998.
  • Philosophy and Ideology in Hume's Political Thought
    with David Hume and David Fate Norton
    Ethics 94 (3): 534-536. 1981.